I met Scott in kindergarten, I'm pretty sure. He was
just always there, always kind, always smiling, usually laughing. Such a smart
guy, friendly to everyone, and so gentle. And good-looking, have mercy.
thanks for the pic, interwebz!
When I was 19 I moved to the Chicago area and before I left
Scott gave me a copy of Stephen R. Covey’s Seven
Habits of Highly Effective People. I was so touched, not only that he would
give it to me but also because he took the time to write some notes to me in
the back of the book, which I still have. When it was Scott’s birthday (recently) I remembered that a while ago I told him that I live in the same city
as (the late) Covey, and I thanked him for his kind words. Scott asked me to
remind him what he had written, but I don’t think I got back to him. So I thought
to document here what he wrote, as I continue to be moved by the gesture.
Here’s what he wrote (with a blue pen) in the back pages of
the book:
***Growing Up***
When we were young, we thought the world could give us
everything; we weren’t afraid of being ourselves and we knew who we were. We
stood together because we didn’t know there was any other way to stand. We
never questioned our motives or our friends. We thought our parents were
heroes, and we loved spending Friday nights in the family room watching TV:
Family Ties, The Cosby Show, The Wonder Years. And they were wonder years, for
we lived on dreams and the hope they never failed to inspire. We ate our three
meals a day and went to bed by nine. The best times of the week were those
Saturday night slumber parties or the co-ed birthday parties.
All fights between friends were forgotten within a week and
caused no permanent damage. Before bed, our favorite thing to do was to listen
to daddy’s bedtime stories. School was actually liked at times; after all,
grades didn’t matter so much and we got naptimes and cookies and reading after
lunch and “free time.” And free time was always things like kickball and
capture the flag, where you never had to dress up and it didn’t matter how much
you might sweat. We used to dress up for book reports, and pull props from
paper bags, like in show & tell. We got graded on things like handwriting
and art. We had spelling tests every Friday. Our moms called out the words on
Thursday night, while fixing dinner. It was O.K. to hug our teachers. The notes
we passed in class always had a box to check or a secret code.
We smiled a lot every day, and
cried about little things that went away within a matter of weeks at the most,
because they were either petty or easily resolved or we didn’t understand them
yet. We played recreational sports where fun was never dependent on winning. We
never counted calories. The ice cream man could bring the whole neighborhood
running. We never got embarrassed when our parents came to tuck us in at night,
complete with hugs & kisses. We got our homework done in no time and spent
the afternoons running in the sunshine. We played at each other’s houses,
unless it was to go to the skating rink or park, where the swings and the
merry-go-rounds fit just right. We told our mothers all our worries and somehow
she could always solve them. We never thought we looked bad in a photograph.
Freckles were cute. Bad hair days were unheard of. We never worried about
getting old too fast. Instead we wished we could group up and be like the “big
kids.”
Then one day we grew up, and we were the big kids. Suddenly,
dreams were left by the roadside and stepped on by those we thought we trusted
(and sometimes stepped on those that trusted us). School became something
important, where we had to prove ourselves with letters on a piece of light
green paper. And money entered into our everyday vocabularies, as we wrestled
over matter of allowance.
We forgot how to have fun by ourselves or how to party
innocently. Our hearts were broken and the wounds never healed. Our friends
changed before our very eyes, and there was nothing we could do. We learned
hard lessons about life and love and fear of a world not as wonderful as we
used to think.
Illusions fell.
We learned that our parents weren’t perfect. We said and did
things we’d grow to regret. Then we began to wish we could go back to the
easier days, where we could be happy without doubting the sincerity of the feeling.
But now, at least we still have each other to lean on. That’s one thing that never
changes. At least we still like the sunshine and movies and can still cry at
Christmas. And love still rules our hearts, as it forever will.
-Rhett
Iseman
· “I always knew I’d look back on the times I
cried and laugh, but I never thought I’d look back on the times I laughed and
cry.” – Unknown
·
“It’s not how much money you have, or how
expensive your car is that makes you a wealthy person; because, if you have
your health, and true friends and a loving, genuine family, then that makes
you the richest person in the
world…” – Peter Caprino ([Scott’s] grandpa)
And then he wrote a personal note to me. Isn’t that great?
Scott, thanks for your friendship. And thanks for your
insight to write something that meant a lot to read at age 19, and means just
as much but with different meaning at age 30-something.
1 comment:
Scott has always been a bit of a night to me. I ran out of gas on Fairmount Ave and, wouldn't you know, Scott happened to there to pick me up. I remember him smelling so good, being so kind, and remind him every chance I get. It's the little things. He had it mastered!
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