No. I’m not falling in love with anyone. I fell in love with
my hero, Frank, fifty-two years ago, and I’m still in love with him. Not planning
on falling in love again.
In fact, I never plan to fall at all, but that doesn’t keep
me from tripping or slipping or stumbling and going splat down on my knees or
my fanny . . . or my arm or ankle.
All my life I’ve been plagued with falls. Pictures of me
when I was a little girl often show knees with bandages, so I must have been
falling even back then.
The first bad fall that I remember was in our neighborhood
in a post-World War II housing project in New Orleans. I was in sixth grade, so
I guess I was about eleven years old. Every afternoon, we kids would grab our
skates as soon as we got home and head for the sidewalk next to our apartment,
strap on our skates, tighten them with our keys, and begin to skate dance all
up and down the sidewalk, singing “I’m Looking Over a Four-Leaf Clover,”
“Singing in the Rain,” “My Blue Heaven,” and other jazzy tunes. On one of those
afternoons, I stumbled, fell, and broke my left arm. That was the first broken
bone.
Many falls later, in 1962, when I was in college, I took
another major fall. My roommate and I had been to lunch and were returning to
our dorm room. For some silly reason, we started playing as we went up the
stairs. I’d give Alice a little push, and she’d run up a few steps; then she’d
give me a push, and I’d run up. When we got a few steps from the landing on the
second floor, she gave me my push, and I stumbled. Clumsy girl! Down I went,
landing on my ankle. The pain was excruciating. We both knew that I was hurt
badly, so Alice took me to the infirmary, where the school nurse gave me her
cure-all for every ailment—hot Jell-O. Go figure on that one! When the hot
Jell-O didn’t heal my ankle, Alice took me to the hospital in Jackson, Mississippi,
where my ankle—broken, of course—was put in a cast.
I never thought that my clumsiness on a Wednesday afternoon
in February 1961, would change my life forever, but it did.
I stayed out of class for several days; however, soon our
house mother insisted that I go back to class. Almost all of my classes were on
the second floor of Nelson Hall, so I was in a quandary. But Alice had the
solution. You see, Alice had been in love with the new man on campus, Frank
Young, since he came to Mississippi College in August 1960. It was really just
a crush that she had, but you’d surely think she was in love . . . in love from
afar, that is. Her solution? She’d get Frank to carry me up the stairs, and she
could flirt with him while he performed his chore.
That decision was the beginning of a lifetime love affair,
not for my sweet roommate, but for Frank and me. Oh, believe me, there were
some tears before our courtship settled in. The night that I went back to our
dorm room after Frank called me and asked me for a date was anything but
pleasant. When I told Alice what I was doing, she burst into tears and accused
me of taking her boyfriend. What? They weren’t even dating. She announced that
she’d just go home that weekend, and I thought that was a good idea. When she
came back to our room on Sunday evening, she was just fine. She knew that even
if he didn’t date me, it certainly didn’t mean he’d date her. Alice and I
remained best friends; we roomed together until Frank became my “roommate”; she
was in our wedding; and we’re still good friends . . . fifty-two years later. A
very fortuitous fall, don’t you think?
I continued to fall through the years . . . in our home, at
church, on the campus where I taught, in Mexico, in Ukraine, everywhere we
went. Sometimes I’d get scratches, sometimes bruises, always aches and pains
afterwards. If you’re not from the South, you may not understand our expression
for those aches and pains. We say we’re “stove up.” Please don’t ask for an
explanation! Even worse than scratches, bruises, aches and pains is the
embarrassment which accompanies public falls. My pride is always hurt the most!
Fast forward to March 2004. Frank and I had relocated from
the South to Cerrillos, New Mexico, to be close to our daughter, Wendy, and her
family. We needed to go back to Pensacola to pack up the final load of odds and
ends that we’d left there. We arrived on Tuesday afternoon, and while he was
loading heavy stuff, I was to do some light packing upstairs. I finished my
easy job and headed down to put a box in the truck. I don’t think I was meant
to navigate stairs because just about three steps from the bottom, I slipped.
Once you’ve broken an ankle, you never forget the pain. It was back. I knew for
sure that I’d broken the other ankle.
Poor Frank! That evening, after we’d been to the emergency
room and had gotten a temporary cast put on, he had to carry me up the stairs
again. You can believe for sure that this time it wasn’t nearly so romantic!
10 comments:
Oh dear it is really hard to leave comments on your site but I did want to say how much I enjoyed this blog so I will jump through all the hoops :)
Just checking to see if a change that I made might help. Thanks for telling me!
Looks like falling has worked for you and Frank.
http://joycelansky.blogspot.com/2013/04/atoz-f-favorite-son.html
It surely has, Joyce!! But I'd like not to fall anymore!! I'm getting too old . . .
I enjoyed reading your 'falling" tales :)
Oh, that's a sweet story and I'm in pain from a fall I just had yesterday. Nothing broke though--glad you two made it all these years!
Sorry to hear about so many ill-fated falls, but I'm glad that things have worked out so well for you and Frank. Here's hoping that you never have an ill-fated fall again!
Hello my falling-pro, I think you have mastered falling so well that you are in no danger of any more. At least I hope not! :)
Thanks for all the comments! You've made my day! Think I'll just sit here at the computer and not risk any falls for a while . . .
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