It began so innocently. I was 17, a senior in high school who was producing his own sports “newspaper.” I was asked to write roundups for the Meridian Star for the Sunday editions about the Sam Dale Conference.
I did, and like an alcoholic taking
his first drink, I was smitten. The words were shots of adrenalin. I remember
writing a short story that Fall that used this sentence: He used metaphors like others used a revolver, similes like others used
a knife.
Luckily, I wrote that only once. Though
over the top, clearly I was in love with the written word like others were
ogling cheerleaders. To write one sentence per piece that was clearly mine,
something no one had written before was enough of an incentive to keep me
going. Still is.
The following spring, I was asked to
cover a baseball game. I came into the newspaper, sat down at the typewriter
(yes, you read right) and typed for what seemed to be an hour. I wrote five
inches. When I was done, they told me to take a message back to someone I
didn’t know in the printing room they called the back-shop. I ran. In those
days the method of operation still used “hot” type, or metal engraving. I ran
into a man carrying a page of those things that would have been transformed by
the press into a page in the newspaper.
Such screaming, I heard.
I nearly didn’t make it to another
day in the business.
Though some have wished that had been
true, here I am, 44 years later, still writing. Five years ago this weekend, I
retired from that business, and began writing for pleasure. Like holding grains
of salt on a windy day, this is hard, hard to do.
It’s hard, as so many of my friends
told me then, to say goodbye to what you had known and, quite frankly, loved
for so long, to say goodbye to friends, co-workers, readers. But I did.
Granted, I was been so lucky for
these many years. I covered Super Bowls, sat next to Muhammad Ali once, talked
with Bear Bryant one on one. In management, I led some of the best sports
staffs a manager could have and for 12 straight years they won national awards
at three different newspapers.
I was privileged to see some of the
best in sports and I was horrified to see some of the worst.
I worked inside, outside, done design
and done agate. If it could be done either in sports or news, I took a shot at
it. I worked at startup of USA Today, and I wrote some of my best stuff for a
couple thousand readers of a local news section.
I looked into the eyes of some of the
greatest of this generation and help tell their stories, and I there were times
I wrote about junior high athletes who none of us ever heard of again.
But…
Here’s
what I learned.
This was a job. No matter how
important I might have thought it to be or how much I loved it or even how much
it paid (which was soon a distant somewhat pleasant memory), it was a job. I’m
just the next guy, to paraphrase a friend.
It was not life. Mine or anyone
else’s. The greatest thing I did in the past few years is demote myself twice
for a much greater calling.
But what I did was a job, not
glamorous, not something that brought fame. A job.
My life?
Much, much more. I’ve found life in
the last 14 years of a 35-year career, found meaning, found direction, found
love, actually as full of cliché that might be.
I’ found that helping others wasn’t a
chore but a privilege. I found that caring wasn’t an albatross but a dove. I
found that loving even those who were hard cases and thought the press was
something to be hated wasn’t all that difficult, amazingly, because I found the
ultimate love one could find.
And so I went into full-time
ministry, full-time into life. The story telling continued in a different
venue.
To coin as many clichés as I can, at
the end of the day all this will go away. We will be left with paperless
newspapers, and we will have tweets and blogs and Facebooks and you name it
all. Perhaps as someone once wrote we’ve not even glimpsed the glory to come.
Perhaps the newspaper will silently,
like me, slip into that good night. But we will know we were here. The evidence
remains. A column here and there stood out, they told me. A story here and
there hit the right note, and tears were shed or someone laughed out loud or a
couple words resonated and stuck in someone’s mind.
I’ve spilled no hot type engravings
lately, just slit a few veins and let the words spill out as Red Smith once
said of writing.
God has been good in the five years
we’ve spent fully engaged with each other.
It's been a very quick five years of these things. Seems like I wrote the first one just a few minutes ago. I've written about the loss of pets, about the gaining of friends. I've been through and amazing six churches in that time (two at one time, three at another, and the one I'm at now). I've lived in four houses. We've been to Israel, and to Eunice, La.
And through it all, I've had some loyal readers and a very loving and patient wife.
A final story this morning: I once wrote to novelist Stephen King when I fashioned myself to be a novelist. To my ultimate surprise, he wrote back. His advice: “Writers write. There is no substitution for that. Writers must write. That’s who they are, not what they do.” Maybe it was a form letter, but I’ve never forgotten that.
After Russian leader Leon Trotsky was mortally wounded by a man who hated him, he supposedly said, “Do not kill this man. He has a story to tell.”
That’s what I have tried to be, I reason, a story teller above all else. With words. With photos. With design. With creative thought. I’ve tried to tell our stories. Or at least the greatest story ever told.
I thank you. I've told myself I would go to 50,000 hits on this site and then stop. That's less than 5,000 to go. We'll see.
4 comments:
Carry on!
there were supposed to be some "applause"s in there.
Kevin, I'm would be amiss if I didn't invite you to a dinner we are having at Carrollton, on dec. 6. It is a fund-raiser with special music, silent auction and such. 6:30 pm
Thanks, Billy! But that is the night of our choir Christmas party.
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