For Christmas, five people made it possible for me to hear
and see the artist that I infused into the literature I taught for 32 years.
On a rainy December night.I
saw “Bruce Springsteen on Broadway”
Just getting into the show seemed a long shot. It was sold
out—all the shows are, but when my lifelong friend Jim Reifeiss snagged a
ticket, he insisted I could, too. Jim’s advice was motivation, but so was the
support of Pam and Anna (both miles away), but particularly my son Nicholas,
now working in NYC. He was on the computer trying to figure out a way to nab a
ticket and not have me be stabbed with a $1,000+ price from scalpers (and I
have no scalp left). They were all pulling for me since I flew out there with
only a faint hope of getting to see Bruce.
That’s when former student, Dr. Frank Lopez (and his son Lex) step into the
plotline. At 5:15 pm, I turn the corner and see them in the front of the ‘cancelation
line’ waiting for me. This is two hours before any cancelled tickets are even
sold! I ask Frank what is he doin’ here, and he explains, “I’m making sure you
get in! Look, I was just in the box office and someone just gave back tickets
and you can buy one, there’s only one—right now!” I ran in and bought it at
face value. And that is how this story began. It is the best $850 I have ever
spent. Then Frank and I headed to dinner, walking through the misty rain. I am
forever in his debt. I called my family and Jim and all were excited.
Fast forward twenty years, I made the best decision of my
life. I proposed to Pam, the girl next door, in 1985—the year “Born in the USA”
…and thankfully she accepted. And largely because of her wisdom and support, my
adult children have ‘evolved’ way past me. I’m the luckiest guy in the Encinitas.
As I watched Bruce tell the story of his life through song
and story, I could not help but feel this mystical bond between two guys who
came from hardscrabble soil and who tried to make the best of what we had. I
felt a spiritual connection because the pressure to be something,’ to do something,’
to matter to someone and inspire them—to be a good father and loving husband; well,
all that was a part of Bruce’s journey as well as mine. The cross we both still
bear, along the anxiety and worry that comes with that weight, is part of why I
felt bonded to Springsteen; and the responsibility to be “tougher than the rest”
is the fulfillment and beauty of life’s commitments.
Nowadays, I don’t attend St. Martha Catholic Church, which shadowed
my younger days, nor does Springsteen, who
spent his youth livin’ next to St. Rose of Lima. So when Bruce told the
audience—and I was just seven rows away—what he says most nights—I knew exactly
what he was about to tell us because I say it, too: The Lord’s Prayer. I know
that my little world isn’t gonna get connected to a spiritual high speed modem
to the heavens. But it makes me feel grateful, more grounded, able to in some
spiritual way make a difference to those I care about.
The fifteen songs he played meant so much more as he
explained how each one was a part of his journey. I thought about the songs I
played in my classroom to the 10,000 kids I taught over 32 years. (If you want
to know which songs he played, you will have to message me on FB ‘cause I think
Bruce wants to keep that a secret. The list was something I wrote down the
following morning from memory.)
I’ve been lucky, really lucky to have had family and dear
friends like Jim Reifeiss who helped me find True North in my life, but I never, ever thought I
would get a chance to be seven rows from a man and Patty, his wife, whose work
spoke to so many people who had hungry hearts and a desire to find the “Promised
Land.” Springsteen is vulnerable, giving,
humble, passionate, and he reminds me that in this “Land of Hope and Dreams” that
you gotta get out there on those two lanes and make your mark—even when you’re “Dancin
in the Dark.”
I had to add the picture of my lifelong friend Jim Reifeiss--who has called me "Chief" since he was 14 and I was 21. Without Jim's encouragement this would not have happened.
ReplyDeleteHoly Cow 247 page views in 5 hours!!
ReplyDeleteGlad to see you showed a little faith Mr. P.,sounds like there was magic in the night.
ReplyDeleteThunderRoad was the fifth song her played, Dylan..
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