A Gentle Inspiration
By Chuck
Martin
Eloquence be damned, for now, at this
hour, late, late Wednesday night, when I should be in bed, sleeping.
This is a bit of a brain/emotion dump.
I just realized that I knew Mark. Not
well, but we played football and basketball together. He pretty much
always played both sports in his rugby shirts. I was on his team when
we were in L.A. playing against the L.A. Motion.
My mind spins now, in a seemingly
different way than yesterday, when I was awakened by a friend's phone
call at 8am, imploring me to turn on the TV. The images then were
shocking, and I kept a live video stream going all day on my computer
at work, with the latest audio and video, but my work keeping me at
least semi-sane.
Last night, I realized I had a friend
who was on business in NYC. I called, and I felt gratified that he
answered. But then I was stunned to hear him tell me his story, that
he was staying in the hotel next to the World Trade Center, than he
had seen the jets slam into the edifice, and that he literally ran for
his life as the buildings fell.
This evening, I talked to a good
friend, who runs our gay basketball program, and he told me about
Mark, but I really didn't make the connection until I saw the face.
Then I knew. And that new, stronger, different somehow, shock set in.
The tears well up. The dizziness of the feeling sinks in.
I didn't know Mark all that well. I
think I first played basketball with him, part of our regular Sunday
evening games. I was a regular, he was sporadic. He was big, yet
graceful. His voice boomed over the court, yet he always, always
seemed to be smiling.
We got involved in football, flag
football. Now there was a big load. I was always glad, when we
scrimmaged, when he was on my team. When he knocked over an
opponent--a frequent occurrence--once the play ended, he would be the
first one back to help him back on his feet.
And he could move too. For being so
big, he was also quick, both on the basketball court and the football
field. Whether a quick plant heading up the lane or a silky juke to
shed a defensive back, he was always in control of that massive,
athletic body.
The words "gentle giant" come
to mind to describe Mark. Although an imposing presence physically, he
was a calming presence in all other areas. I don't think I ever saw
him get upset. Certainly I'm been involved in my share of
combativeness over the years, occasionally going beyond the friendly
trash talking and jostling. Mark would step in and make things right.
He would say the right thing, in the right way, and his larger size
didn't ever need to be a factor.
Does it take losing someone you know to
turn the surreal into the real? I don't know. It certainly makes it a
bit more personal, a bit more real, kind of like coming out makes
gayness a reality to those who were previously ignorant. There is
definitely a sense of mourning, that this world has lost the goodness
of a fine man. One of many such losses, but one, in this case, that
hits closer to home that I want to admit, than I want to
believe.
Many years ago, during my senior year a
college, I took a choral class, ending the quarter with a performance.
The men had to wear black pants, a white button-down shirt, and a bow
tie. I added a red ribbon to the ensemble, wanting to make a statement
and ready to fight to make it. But the instructor/conductor passed by
before the concert and simply asked if I was wearing that for anyone
in particular. I said no, and then I wondered if I should be happy or
sad about that answer: happy that I didn't know anyone who had dies,
or sad that I had not gotten closer to enough people that I hadn't
know anyone who had died.
Now, I know.
As best as I remember the line
"How we face death is at least as important as how we face
life." From the reports being pieced together, Mark faced death
head on, doing his best to control it, wrest it from its hold on him
and his fellow passengers. While he ultimately lost his own personal
struggle, his actions apparently saved the lives of many, many more.
And now, I just struggle to face death--his--half as bravely as he did
himself.
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Chuck Martin is a writer living in San
Francisco.
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