Politic Football

I’ve never decided if I actually miss playing football. I played tight end and outside linebacker for one season, during my freshman year of high school. The previous winter I’d lifted weights often enough for a junior high kid, then I did the long jump in track during the spring and kept in good condition all summer. I was no all-out beast, but for me it was decent dedication.

Our coach, Mr. Noble, was horrible. I respected the hell out of him at the time, and so did everyone else—he was six five with huge arms. He’d contrive a good practice with the assistant coaches for ten minutes every day while we ran the perimeter of the practice field, a workout monotonous as recopying history notes. We were in better shape than any other team in the county, but we couldn’t play football worth a lick.

I started in one or two games toward the end of the season after the first string tight end, Mitch, fractured his wrist, and before the second-string fullback, Eric, learned the position. Like all of the only-half-decent guys, I played special teams every game. Problem was, I sucked at blocking because I had no girth, and I couldn’t catch very well because all we ever practiced was blocking. In games, we almost always ran the ball. Our tailback, Conor, kicked butt. He’d have been even better if our coach didn’t make him run stupid plays all the time. We’d be fourth and eight at our own 35, and Coach Noble—he made us address him as “sir” all the time (“Yes, sir,” “I don’t understand, sir,” “Sir, I have to leave practice early tomorrow, sir”)—would tell Hildebrand, the QB, to call a blast, an off-guard run right up the middle.

Conor would’ve been better, too, if the linemen, such as myself, had skill as well as endurance. There’s a picture in the yearbook from that season that makes me feel like a loser every time I see it—Conor’s charging through the line, and I’m on my feet with my knees bent and no one to block, my guy diving for the tackle. Man, I really handled him.

Maybe things will change after I graduate, but sometimes I feel like I never deserved to keep playing, that I never would have been good enough to have any real confidence in my ability. But then I go to a Friday night varsity game and the stands are on their feet as the team charges onto the field under lights blazing against a solid black sky and I think, that could be me out there jumping around, pulse racing, hollering.

There are many reasons I signed up to play football, some are stupid and some are good, and one of the good ones was to experience the whole team thing—we’re gonna take on our opponents and smash ’em into the ground. There are also many reasons I decided not to play the next year, and one of them was that I never got the feeling of being a team. For me, two and a half hours of practice every day meant struggling to tell my body I could do it, trying to stop being so mechanical about blocking, and busting my butt to catch up with people who’d been playing since fifth grade. It also meant never being as good as the real starters, most of whom had no work ethic but ground us second- and third-stringers into the practice field dust when they got the chance. These players were already getting drunk and laid on the weekends.

I tried really hard to make that sense of team happen, mostly by getting more charged up than just about everyone (except maybe Ardon, the team’s token black guy, who would go bananas) and helping the whole team to get psyched for a game. “Who we gonna beat this week?” became our mantra. One of us would yell it, and the rest of the team would bellow back the name of our upcoming opponent, if we could remember it. Then whoever hollered the question would repeat it, and we’d get louder. Noble would get really pissed when someone popped the question at a Monday practice and (with our games on Thursdays) we answered too tentatively, or with the names of a couple teams. I took an inane pride in adding “”I said…” and “I can’t hear you” to the mix, which caught on fast. Of course, the toughness was drained whenever the voice of whomever was leading the yell cracked in mid-sentence, which happened frequently with all of us age 14 or 15.

The feeling that both me and Coach Noble stunk could be a great reason to quit, or it could be a weak one. In his autobiography, In the Trenches, Reggie White, my favorite football player of all time, writes fondly of his high school football coach, who for over a year bullied and beat up on him, on occasion bringing him to tears. Only after his senior season did he realize “what Coach Pulliam was doing in my life: He was building toughness and confidence inside me. He knew my goal in life was to play pro football, and he knew that if I was to achieve that goal I would need to have the physical, emotional, and spiritual hide of a rhinoceros. He was pounding on me to toughen my hide—and it worked… The toughness and confidence Coach Pulliam built into me went far beyond the realm of sports.” Maybe Coach Noble had something like that in mind when he angrily shattered a wooden cane on a desk while reviewing the past week’s game film. Maybe I just couldn’t handle it. That’s a hard thing to say, though, that I couldn’t handle playing football. I mean, maybe it just wasn’t for me. Golf just isn’t for me; maybe football’s the same way.

My friend Walt loves to golf. I’m not sure how much of it he does anymore, with going to school and working plenty on the side. He claims he had an injury last fall that kept him from some tournaments that he could have cleaned up, but I still don’t know what the injury was. He’s one of my closest friends. That’s the way things seem to go. Clearly I’m the one who should’ve been concerned enough to find out what was wrong, and clearly I dropped the ball. That’s why I still don’t know if the football thing was just me or something else.

I tell people all the time that I miss playing. It kind of makes up for the fact that I stopped. You’re supposed to like being an athlete in high school. Adults appreciate sports, especially in central Pennsylvania. Student council, current issues club, and a student newspaper are unsure ground. So I would say, “No, I used to play, but not this year.” I avoid saying I only played one season three years ago whenever possible.

I try to make up for this apparent fault as well as I can. I get serious about working out at least once a year, hitting the weight room three days a week, running distance, erasing any sign of a gut or a filling out face. I keep the routine long enough to regain what I’ve lost—until I plateau on increments of what I can lift, can run five miles or so without stopping, and build enough of a camaraderie with the rest of the guys in the weight room that I don’t feel awkward asking someone for a spot. Then I just sort of stop. Not all of a sudden, but slowly, like losing interest in a girl.

It makes me feel better to know simply that I can do it, that I can control my body if I wish to. When I’m not pursuing any particular girl, it makes me feel better to get a good glimpse of a girl and know that I’m still in shape as far as being attracted to women and liking the idea of female in general. I don’t have to continually prove to myself that I can date a girl and enjoy it and build a meaningful relationship—it’s enough just to know that I could if I wanted to. The same is true as far as being an athlete.

Excusing my decision not to play was easy the year after I quit. I stayed in the weight room all fall, and ran track that spring. All I had to say was, “I’m thinking about playing again next year,” and nod to a remark about yeah, you should. Piece of cake. Now I have to work harder—promise long articles and big pictures in the school newspaper to my friends on the team (I have a terrible record of delivering on those promises), agree to try to allot student activities funds for team equipment, or make a comment proving how closely I’ve followed their season.

In general, I’m pretty content with that relationship. Sure, it’s awkward. It’s certainly not genuine, and I usually toss relationships that aren’t genuine out the window. But it’s true high school politics, and it charges me up. There’s a grave misconception that the politics of high school involve going out with the right person and making it to the good parties and dressing well. It’s actually being able to take a question like “Why aren’t you playing football?” (or, for that matter, “How come you weren’t at the party Friday?” or “Who do you have your eye on?”) and give a horribly inadequate two-sentence answer that still satisfies the other person. That’s where it’s at, in my book.

Sometimes I get an unfair advantage. Most of my former teammates are convinced they remember me starting most of the second half of the season. I might have started one or two games, as I’ve said, when it was a pretty sure win and the first string guy was injured. It would be a lot tougher to smooth it over in thirty words or less if they remembered me as a guy who couldn’t throw blocks, make tackles, or catch passes, which is mostly how I remember myself as a football player. How accurate those memories are I don’t know.

I screw up on my own often enough, however, to even things out. High school politics are a delicate balance between being visible, outgoing, unique—even obnoxious—enough to stay well-known and widely liked, and being mature, relaxed, and conventional enough to keep people from being annoyed. I set myself back in the same arena my teammates help me out—that fundamental skill of believably offering inapt answers. The natural tendency is to gravitate toward one side of the balance—either being too off-the-wall or too stiff—and avoid the precarious fulcrum. My responses become unexciting and placid for a while and I lose sway; people can roll their eyes at my excuses with an air of “whatever” and think nothing of it. The idea is to inject adequate authority into just enough nonsense to keep myself from becoming either undesirable or difficult to approach. From either position, my peers will probably stop asking why I don’t play anymore altogether.

Which bothers me in a weird way, perhaps hinting at one of the reasons I played for that one year: to gain political sway I sought. It is, after all, useful for far more than excusing myself for not playing football. It’s good for getting people to latch onto my dreams and visions, to feel honored by my praise, to seek my advice and feedback. In short, in high school it’s good for validating me as a genuine leader. Certainly that motive is partly selfish, but inherent in a genuine leader is an authentic desire and commitment to serve others. A real leader is one who works for the good of people beside himself. That’s the paradox of it.

That’s the paradox of football, too. When Conor made great runs, the respect and recognition he received grew. But at the same time, the whole team advanced five, ten, twenty yards towards the end zone and a win. On the field, I was no star. I tried to push back defenders and contain the outside run, but my success was limited. In the hallways of the high school, though, I was able to make those important political plays with power and agility, which I realized to a new extent as my seemingly inadequate excuses effortlessly shrugged aside skepticism. And I’ve been charged by the wins ever since. Yet that confidence and fulfillment didn’t come until after I’d decided to stop playing football, and effects can’t be their own causes. Unless, of course, that paradox is true, too.

I Won

Today’s the day,

my time to shine.

The time flies,

and yet drags on forever.

As I enter the ring,

I lose all consciousness

of all those crowds.

Now I must concentrate,

Concentrate.

Wait! Is it over already?

How did that happen?

I want to do it over!

Wait!

But they call my number,

in first place.

Can it be?

Can it really be?

It’s really all right,

and all those years,

those countless, countless years.

All of the exhausting work,

and the sacrifices,

oh, the sacrifices,

But they’ve all paid off,

They’ve been worth it.

And I’ve won,

I’ve finally won.

Urbania

There must be more to life—

Graffiti on the walls

Announcing that he loves her.

Marked it on the walls,

Marked it on her with the shiner

She wears around town.

 

There must be more to life—

Windows with gunshot wounds.

I sit and wonder,

Cigarette between my fingers,

Do the windows ever bleed?

Is the glass pane long dead?

 

There must be more to life—

Life plays like a TV with the reception knocked out.

Everything is undefined static.

One day drags into the next without

Any distinction.

 

There must be more to life—

Mascara flakes off onto the tissue

In my hand as I wonder how

I’m going to get out of here—

My Urbania.

Mistake

She had a ring around her

eye

a purple ring.

She took off her glasses so I could see where her father’s fist had framed

her lashes.

“Look what my dad gave me.”

I looked at her but I did not say anything.

Overexposure

Afraid of the light

I hide in my red

den.

 

From the other side

it looks like black and white

but from my angle:

 

death.

It haunts like some stalking shadow,

a vague whisper of night.

A relentless night,

an endless night.

 

Someday you will find me

crushed beneath the weight

of my sins,

stiff and cold. What a sight.

 

I long for warmth,

but the bright glare

overwhelms

 

into startling gray dots

that swim past my reality.

Marred

 

pour of blue substanceless

fear.

Empty words

 

as meaningless as any truth

scream aimlessly

into pretense.

 

Mythic hopes

vanish delicately

into the blackness.

 

Please ignore me,

and shut that door behind you.

I shun the day,

 

and the phosphorescent glow

that accompanies it.

It hurts

 

stabbing like a murderous acupuncturess

with dark advice on the sensitivity

of nerves.

 

The salve of darkness cloaks

while I rest from the numbing

overexposure.

Homage

I want to lose myself in

the rain

a torrent

of black angels’ tears

somewhere in deep forest

where only faeries talk

and moss is soft bed

and I can drown

in peace.

in pain.

 

take me there…

or I’ll walk one day.

just head out, past the horizon.

one foot after another,

as I have survived my whole life.

I will meander slowly through the rain

droplets softened by eves of pine trees

you will never see me again.

 

the black angels overhead

their wings brush the tips of the trees

as they loom above

and make the deer cower.

I sink to my knees

and give them homage

with my wrist and knife and blood.

Jaded

The bus ride is long, but

it only culminates my longer day

A day of shattered hopes

A day of shattered dreams

Every day I return a little less of me

A little more of them

 

With every rumor uttered a dream is dead

With every wicked stare a hope quenched

Eventually I’ll stand and say “No! Not me, not today”

Eventually I’ll give up and fade away

Close

green, dangling

swept up and falling

slowly I come to you

 

I’ll knock on your door

We’ll sit on the porch

smoking and being

We’ll let silence take its course

 

Now come to me softly,

closely.

I have a secret from the inside

 

Brighter days are spent with you

I bathe in comfort

In eye contact

in the smile on your lips

 

Come, linger for a while

so I will not forget your air.

 

Hold me tight

And sleep with me once.

At least once,

although a million times

if granted.

 

For people like you

don’t often pass me by

who turn on a light in me.

 

So let’s have our time be now

Before it is to go.

And be as careless as we wish

 

For tomorrow will pass

and we may forever

lose this chance

To be as close as close can be.

There Was a Time

there was a time

not so long ago

when I said

I wouldn’t let anyone

control me

but not anymore

it wasn’t really

a conscious decision

to let you take over

but it’s clear

that you have

you influence my every thought

every word that comes out of my mouth

I make every decision based on

what you would do

or say

you live inside my head

will you ever go away?

I need to be free

I need

to breathe

but you are the air

you’re the water,

the sky,

the grass and trees

you’re everything

the world

my world

and I can’t get away

you’re in my dreams

day and night

you’re everywhere

I can’t be without you

can’t live

and I don’t want to know

what it would be like

to try.

One Nothing

I peeled back the covers

left nothing and its sweet form

to last while I walked

with uncertainty

past knowing and not knowing

what I was to do

with one less.

You own everything

sometimes

and don’t know what else

to do

but take it

until it stops being given

and soft skin

pushes back at you.

 

Forbid the thought

because nothing

is your savior today.