06 December 2008

thirty-nine memories (4 & 5)

Memory #4: The most delicious flavor on earth

The “Pork Pit” in Montego Bay, Jamaica was the first place I ever tasted jerk pork and festival. Jeanie and I had traveled with Courtney to scout out his homeland for future long-term ministry opportunities. That sultry, salty night air; that perfect charcoal and pimento smoke aroma; the sea breeze; the rhythms of reggae and dancehall pulsing in the tropical air—we sat on stone benches and I took my first beloved bites of a spicy island delicacy. I wouldn’t want to guess how many pounds of searingly delicious jerk pork served in brown paper with no plastic wear (all the world’s best foods must be handled with one’s fingers) I ate during the two years we lived in Jamaica.

When we ruminate upon the land we called our home, we remember the people, the sights, the smells, the sounds. Jamaica has to be experienced with all the senses to be known. And our taste-buds will never forget her.

Memory #5: The most beautiful sound in the world

On that same first ministry scouting trip to Jamaica, we spent most of our time in the sauna that is Kingston in early August. One day, with no excursions planned, I was out on the veranda reading a book, when I heard in the distance a familiar sound. The shrubs and wall surrounding the property blocked my view of the road, but the sound was unmistakable. A siren song—irresistible. I wandered to the end of the drive and heard voices before I saw the three young boys, pounding a basketball on the pavement, making their way up the road, and now toward me.

We had come to Jamaica to see whether or not we might begin a kind of mentoring and mentor training ministry to try to reach young men. I was interested to find out if we might start a ministry utilizing the vehicle of basketball, but was told that in Jamaica, Soccer was king. Cricket and athletics (track and field) were beloved as well, but nobody much played basketball.

This day was the first I had seen a basketball, and I had seen no basketball courts anywhere we had traveled. Of course I asked the boys about their ball. They said they had been playing in the street just down the road on a makeshift hoop nailed to a tree—until the hoop had broken down a few minutes before.

“But Jamaicans don’t play basketball,” I ribbed them with a smirk.

“Ya mon,” chimed in one of the boys. “Wi luv da game.”

They explained to me how for the first time just a few months prior, one of the two local Jamaican television stations had carried the entire six game series of the Bulls and Suns in the 1993 NBA finals. My eyes must have bugged out of my head.

As we spent days after this asking questions about basketball, come to find out the little island had gone Michael Jordan and basketball crazy as a result of those televised games. One pastor told us that there were hoop like iron rings nailed to nearly every telephone pole in his ghetto neighborhood, and the children played basketball, barefoot, with anything that might serve as a ball (tin can, rolled up t-shirt, deflated soccer ball) for hours upon hours outside his church property.

And I had my call from God. His voice is most beautiful, I must tell you--it sounds like the pounding of a basketball on hot pavement.





05 December 2008

thirty-nine memories (3)

Memory #3: Imaginary Friend

When I was very young I had an imaginary friend who played with me. What we mostly played, though not exclusively, were sports. Football, mainly. Baseball and basketball to. There is a photo of me, in some dusty album somewhere, wearing one of my father’s tattered church basketball jerseys. I hold a red, white, and blue basketball, in the stone cold, unfinished basement of our rural Wakarusa home. Behind me, a wooden backboard and a full-sized basketball rim and net hang on the wall, five feet or so from the concrete floor. I suspect my friend and I had just finished a wild game, defeating some imagined team, for my cheeks look flushed and rosy. My father’s jersey hangs to my ankles.

I think my friend—Rebound, he was called—had made the winning shot that day.

04 December 2008

Deadly Stampede At Wal-Mart Not Surprising : NPR

Deadly Stampede At Wal-Mart Not Surprising : NPR

thirty-nine memories (cont'd)

Memory #2: The greatest Pony League baseball team in the history of Wakarusa

Virgil Weldy, Jr. Insurance. This was the name of my pony league (12-15 years old) baseball team in the Wakarusa Little League. When I was twelve, we were an expansion team. All the other teams in the league had existed the previous season(s), and thus, had returning (and older) players. To make up for the inequity, those who ran the league decided to give our coach a bunch of early picks in the draft of “little leaguers” who were coming into “pony league.”

I think we ended up something like 0-12 that summer. Our coach kept reminding us: “Just wait boys, we’re going to dominate this league in a year or two.”

He was right. The next year we won just over half of our games. The final two seasons we all played together, we never lost a single game, and our first five batters combined for a batting average of over .600. My memory fails me here, but I think at least six of us from that team (it may have been seven) went on to play varsity baseball at Northwood High School.

03 December 2008

thirty-nine memories

On January 5, 2009, I will celebrate my 39th birtday. I wish I'd thought to start this series a few days ago and then posted once a day until January 5. Anyhow, it's a little less than 39 days until my birthday, so I'll post one memory (in completely whimsical order) from my life in honor of each year of my life. No, the memories will not correspond to particular years. I have no memory of being 17 months old. If all goes well, I may even include a visual aid or two in some of the posts. But not this one.

Memory #1: "Hillside demolition derby"

My two younger brothers and I used to take the following items out to the hill in our backyard: a bigwheel tricycle (Derry), a little red wagon (Jamie); an old metal tricycle (me). Derry would ride his normal little kid style. I rode mine standing up, on the back axle. Jamie rode the wagon the way anybody would, sitting (sometimes kneeling) in the wagon, using the handle to steer. No big deal. Kids ride toys down the hill for fun.

I think it was my suggestion that led us to discover the mad hilarity of a game I would like to now dub "hillside demolition derby." Perched at the top of the hill, each wearing a football helmet of some sort, we aimed our vehicles so as to collide about half way down. Derry (the youngest) gave the countdown. "3-2-1 go."

We met with horrible and hilarious violence somewhere half way to the bottom, bodies and body parts scattered randomly in the summer grass, three boys laughing riotiously at the double flip one of us had turned or at the way the wagon had run over our leg or neck. Only rarely did someone cry. Never for long.