There was a very small reunion Thursday afternoon at the Cracker Barrel at  the Sevierville, TN exit off I-40.  It was just three old high school chums that  hadn’t seen each other since graduation in 1964!  
Morgan  Alred and I have been in touch over the years and have many a good  adventure even after school.  He and I met up in Lenoir City and drove the hour  up to where we had coordinated with Barry  Henderson to meet.  As Morgan and I traveled we went back over the  years and the fun we have had, and we talked about our favorite subject –  cameras.
I’ve been into cameras since Vietnam and changed brands and styles several  times.  When I worked for the Roane County NEWS (1972-1976) I was into SLR work  for advertising and football photography.  I began to do weddings for friends  and finally it grew into a small business.  I ended up with a state-of-the-art  Rapid Omega 200 (4X5) for great wedding shots.  
Morgan is into cameras too, and has even owned and operated a camera  store.  Locally owned camera stores took a big hit with the digital era, so he’s  doing other things now, but photography always comes up when we get  together. 
Anyway, that was the basic topic all the way to the Kodak exit.
Once there we sat nervously, anxiously awaiting our old friend, on a bench  outside facing the Smoky Mountains, and continued to reminisce.  We both halfway  expected Barry to ride up on his Harley, which his is Facebook icon, but with  the threat of rain in the area that didn’t happen.  Had I not known what Barry  looked like from the recent contact I made on Facebook I would have walked right  past him.  
Finally he rolled up in his car and I recognized him immediately.  The  three of us walked quickly toward one another and before I knew it we were in a  “group hug”!  It was a wonderful feeling to actually show our emotion and  feeling for each other!  In high school we would have never dared hug another  boy!  However, on Thursday, three men embraced each other like brothers.  It was  as if 46 years of pent up feelings had finally broken the dam of American social  mores.  We were men, but we were loving it up!
We stood outside a few more minutes and talked and let the nervousness of  the meeting wear off.  Finally, we were ready to go inside and begin catching  up!  
Catching up turned into picking up and we were off; telling the old stories  and mixing in what, when, and where our lives had been over the past 46  years.
I’ve written several posts about the times Barry, Morgan, and I have had  over the past few years, but hearing them confirm my memories was very  satisfying somehow.  However, there were details that I didn’t remember and some  I can’t believe ever happened without me remembering!  Some of those things will  remain secrets just between us guys.
Barry was not that different in his emotions, because I knew him pretty  well back in school days.  We used to talk about things in private, mostly on  our backyard campouts, that we would never have shared with any of our other  friends.  But that inner Barry was still there.  What had changed about Barry  was his attitude and outward persona.  
Back in our junior and senior years, Barry was a mysterious fellow,  especially to the younger boys in our neighborhood.  Barry had that “Fonzie”  persona.  He was straight out of a 60’s teenage movie, with his black  duck-tailed hair, pointed black loafers, tight jeans, and white t-shirt with the  sleeves rolled up, and one sometimes held a package of Pall Mall  cigarettes.
Like Fonzie, he looked like he had hit someone at some point in his life,  and younger boys imaginations played with that scene as he walked by their house  on the way to mine.
Barry did have a couple of fights during school, but to me he was just  Barry a good friend.  I mentioned how some of the neighborhood kids had felt  about him and he seemed surprised and even a bit ashamed.  He confessed that he  had been a mean and troubled young man, but life has mellowed him and showed him  what is important in life.  One of those things is having good friends you can  depend on.
I loved Barry back then...I just didn’t know it, would never have expressed  it.  To get to hug my “best” friend and tell him I loved him as he left, settled  so much that had been unresolved inside.  I’m whole again!  Truthfully, there  was just something missing by not knowing what happened to Barry and not being  able to share my life stories with him.  We’ve both seen and done so much...it  will take a long, long time to really catch up.
I had thought of Barry many many times over the years, whenever I was in a  strange, exciting, scary, or even erotic situation, and I always wished Barry  had been there to see and feel it too.  Like in the old days.  Now, after our 46  year separation, we can resume being friends the way friends ought to  be...honest, open, and caring.
What a difference 46 years make!


Happy for ya.
ReplyDeleteMe, too, dammit!
ReplyDeleteExtremely cool, Mushy. Reminds me of many of the same emotions I had when my band got back together for a few jam sessions this Summer, after close to 30 years of NOT playing together. The group hugs, etc.
ReplyDeleteVery nice.