My Life, My Loves

The story of my family, my friends and my coffee.

Sunday, November 25, 2007

The Flag of My Father

They approached a hill in northern Italy, dead set on taking it. In order for them to advance, this hill was tantamount to the success of their mission.

As they climbed the hill slowly amidst machine gun fire, they came under mortar attack. After an explosion, a piece of molten hot shrapnel pierced his back, severing his left lung. He lay there and thought of his mother, and how he wanted to go home.

He was dying a slow death when a sniper opened fire on his company. Shots rang out and spat up dirt all around him. His eyes burned with sweat and pain seared through is body. “This” he thought, “is how I am going to spend my final minutes.” And, for some reason, he thought about the taxi he drove back home for fifty cents a week. He smiled as he thought about the freedom that came with driving, whether driving around town or through the back roads of southern Alabama. Then it happened.

The sniper’s bullet found his leg, penetrating all of the way through it, almost severing one of the bones. He realized then that he wasn’t as dead as he thought he was, as the pain from his leg wound was far worse than the pain from his shrapnel wound.
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My dad had a far off look in his eye as he told me this story. It was the first and only time I had ever heard him speak of what he went through during world war two. After he told me this story, I asked him if he was scared.

“They wanted to send me back.” He said. “But I fought real hard so I wouldn’t have to go.”
“Why?” I asked. “Didn’t you feel it was your duty to go back?”
“My duty had been fulfilled, son. I went and left a part of me in Italy. God didn’t want me to go back.”
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As I sat here and watched the final thirty minutes of Flags of Our Fathers, I wondered how many people had fathers that fought in the world wars yet still had unanswered questions. I wonder if that is how it is supposed to be, that we live our days now with only memories and questions, living each day wondering if we will ever really know those whom we love.

I look back now and am comforted having had my father for as long as I did yet I have an insatiable longing to go back so that I can possibly “know” him. Now that I think about it, I don’t think anyone knew him, not even my mother.

But that isn’t bad, I guess. Maybe that’s the legacy he and the others left for us all………..to not to know them so that our children could know us through them.

Tuesday, November 06, 2007

Golf

One of my favorite pasttimes is playing golf. Some of the best times of my life have happened while playing golf either with my brothers or with my friends. Now that my son is five and has been hitting golf balls since he was three, I'm patiently waiting for the day when we can play golf together.

Taking it one step further, however, I love to play in tournaments, particularly the four-person best ball type tournaments. The place where I work recently sponsored a team in the Hampton Roads Technology Council annual tournament. We were looking to improve on our second place finish last year, but we finished third in the first flight, but one stroke too good for first in the second flight. Anyway, we had a good time and my good friend CR won the longest drive! Here are some pictures from that day. WE had a blast!

Me and CR


Me and the Jake Man

Me and HorHey


My approach shot on #14 from 109 yards. It bounced once, hit the pin, and ended up there. Yes, we DID birdie this hole!