I never played sports for my father
I never played sports
for my father. Sure, I signed up for
little league baseball, received my team shirt and hat, but I never attended
practice and at the only game I play in, with my father watching, I dropped a
fly ball that cost us the game.
In the play “I Never
Sang for my Father,” by Robert Anderson, the main character Gene (the son) and
his father, Tom, are looking at old pictures and reminiscing. In the scene, the
father’s love for his son is clear, when Tom asks about a tune that Gene used
to sing for him as a boy. Gene confesses that he never sang the tune for his
father, meaning he only sang it for his mother, but Tom recalls otherwise. In
the argument that follows, Gene reveals that he plans to move to California
rather than stay in New York and care for Tom.
Gene never sees his father again, and he never sings for his father.
My father encouraged
and sometimes pushed me into sports.
My older brother was a natural athlete. He excelled at hockey, played on the
high school baseball and basketball teams, and even today his golf score is in
the eighties. For birthdays and Christmas, my father gave me sports equipment
and what I called “family gifts.”
I twisted my ankle on the ice
skates, never hit the hoop with the basketball, and I only played football
because my dad took me to the sign-up and attended all the practices and games.
I never learned the football plays, and
as a tackle, it didn’t matter. The snorkel and swim mask, snow skis, and a
backpack were gifts I used. The rubber raft, rowboat, the table hockey game,
and pool table were fun, even if family gifts.
In junior high, I
placed third in an eighth-grade short story contest. My dad helped edit my
grammar and typed the story. I have no
idea what the story was about, and I don’t have a copy. I remember my teacher,
Mr. Amberg, asked me about the last line in the story; something about sparrows
on a telephone wire. I didn’t know why I had written the line or what it
meant. It is possible my dad not only
edited the story but served as a ghostwriter.
In college my “A” in
literature kept me reading. The prospect of a “D” in creative writing suggest a
writing career might be out. Therefore, I focused on books, alcohol, sports
cars, rock’n’roll, and girls. Oh, and the Science of Behavior. My older brother’s career in advertising made
sense to dad. My choice of Psychology and Philosophy, not so much.
I know my dad was proud
of my PhD and my university teaching, but he never lost hope I would be a
writer. In 1977, dad asked me to write a
book review of a new science fiction novel. He was the feature editor at the
Detroit News, and I was an avid Sci-Fi reader. I enjoyed writing the review and
I could tell it pleased my dad. Subsequently, he had me review the second book
in a three-part autobiography by B. F. Skinner.
In retirement, dad planned
to write a historical fiction about the French Voyagers. He had done all the
research and he had purchased a Royal typewriter. The problem was he just
couldn’t seem to get started. He had pecked out a first chapter on the Royal,
but that was all he could manage. After years of feature writing, he had
writer’s block. I remember telling him how using a computer had freed me to
write and I mentioned I would like to write a novel someday.
Dad said, “I hope you
do it while I still have connections in the publishing game.”
My dad never wrote his
novel, and he didn’t live to see me publish a dozen short stories and poems, a
10-minute play, two business books, and seven novels. I never played sports for
my father, but I have written books in his honor and one day I will write his
story of the Voyagers. I just wish I had his first chapter to help me get
started.