Today’s confessions will be public. Out in the open. No
hiding behind a screen hoping the priest fell asleep and didn’t hear a word I
said. No confessing to a loved one who’d forgive me no matter what secrets I
reveal. But confess I will do.
When I was young I had very little of value to confess. I followed (and still follow) the rules of life but what I did do wrong---like smoke my first and only cigarette on a senior high trip to the beach---I told it to my diary. That was back in an era when we practically wrote with ink pots and quills. Don’t I wish! That would make me born before 1822, before mass produced metal pens were invented, and if I was that old I’d be famous. I’d also have lousy penmanship because writing left-handed was not tolerated in pot and quill days. By the way the secret is out of the bag, it’s just an urban myth that right-handed people used quills made from the right wings of birds, and left-handed people bought quills made from the left wings. Quills were sold by barrel length only with no consideration given to their curvature. Someday I’ll still remember that trivia but I’ll forget who our current president is, a fatal no-no on the senility quiz.
When I was young I had very little of value to confess. I followed (and still follow) the rules of life but what I did do wrong---like smoke my first and only cigarette on a senior high trip to the beach---I told it to my diary. That was back in an era when we practically wrote with ink pots and quills. Don’t I wish! That would make me born before 1822, before mass produced metal pens were invented, and if I was that old I’d be famous. I’d also have lousy penmanship because writing left-handed was not tolerated in pot and quill days. By the way the secret is out of the bag, it’s just an urban myth that right-handed people used quills made from the right wings of birds, and left-handed people bought quills made from the left wings. Quills were sold by barrel length only with no consideration given to their curvature. Someday I’ll still remember that trivia but I’ll forget who our current president is, a fatal no-no on the senility quiz.
Okay, confession number one---or is this two? Are we
counting the smoking thing? Anyway my next confession is I’ve always wanted to
be famous. Not so much in this life time, but I wanted my name in the history
books and short of falling on my head and getting back up with a savant-like transformation
into the likes of Albert Einstein, me getting into the history books is not
likely to happen between now and the grave. One of my colonial ancestors had
that happen in reverse. He was smart enough that he shoulda, coulda, woulda
been one of the signers of the Declarations of Independence but he got beaten
up for his “radical politics” against the British and was severely brain
damaged. Why couldn’t his diaries have been passed down to me? I’ll bet he
confessed to significantly more important things than smoking a cigarette. Actually,
I have read some of his words in a history book. I often wonder if guys like
him knew their personal journals would get quoted as footnotes in the Chronicles
of History. Sometimes we need the distance of time to recognize our defining
moments. That’s true for people and nations alike. One man’s act of courage is
another man’s act of rebellion and only the outcome and time can be the final
judge. In our lifetime, think Martin Luther King.
Confession number whatever: The only thing I ever shoplifted
I did when I was ten or eleven and it was a cross make out of mother-of-pearl
shell. My elder self finds it quite odd that I stole a cross, the symbol of
Christ dying for our sins. What on earth was I thinking when I walked into Woolworth’s
Dime Store and walked out with that cross tucked in my pocket? I can still
visualize that basket of tiny, iridescent crosses piled high, a 10¢ each sign
attached. I still have the fruits of my criminal behavior. And it still reminds
me that small wrongs can turn into big regrets. Where is a priest when you need
one? I want to know if stealing a cross is a worse sin than stealing a loaf of
Wonder Bread to feed your family or stealing a pack of Black Jack just because
you’re a kid with no impulse control who likes that licorice and aniseed flavored
chewing gum? One time not too long before Don had his stroke, we went into a confectionery
store and found that Black Jack had returned to the market with a limited
edition. You would have thought he found the Hope Diamond. He bought every pack
of gum the guy had---three boxes of however many came in a case, I’m guessing
50---and Don had a wonderful time handing them out to anyone and everyone who
was old enough to have chewed it as a kid. He was quirky that way about anything
nostalgic.
Side note here: I couldn’t spell nostalgia and the closest I
got was ‘nastalia’ which I let Spell Check have a crack at and it came up with
five choices, not a single one close. I put ‘nastalia’ into my Franklin
Language Master 3000 and out popped the word I wanted. I guess if this side note
has a point it would be that I don’t need to confess that I’m a terrible speller.
I struggle with and bellyache about spelling often enough, but it was a secret
I hid until recent decades---and I guess I still should hide it. Recently, I was at a
shower and they handed out slips of paper, asking everyone to write down some
advice to the bride. I couldn’t do it! I couldn’t write a simple note without
my Franklin! The relative sitting next to me was aghast when a torn the slip of
paper up and refused another. “But you write all the time!” she said and I
replied, “I do but I can’t spell without a dictionary.” The look on her face and
the words that spilled out of her mouth next made me feel two inches high, like
I’d just confessed to a sin worth seeking out the nearest confessional. Bless me, Father, for I have sinned. I’ve
never been to confession before but I just found out that I’ve been a naughty
fraud, flimflamming people into thinking I could write. Oh my!
Back on topic: Do you believe in death bed confessions? I have a few things in my history that I
haven’t told to a single soul, not even to Don. Not even to a diary. I didn’t
break any of the Ten Commandments with
my untold secrets, I’m not worried about my soul burning in hell. But the older we get
the more I imagine everyone would like to clear the secrets out of our heads as
we’re bowing out of life, give them to someone else who’d probably say, "What
the hell am I supposed to do with that?” and we’d reply---if we’re still breathing---“What
I should have done, take it to the grave.” ©