Riding High in Gatlinburg

GatlinburgTN_August1970 (2)

In August of 1970, I felt I had lost my father. The trauma of his World War II emotional scars, heart disease and bi-polar diagnosis had consumed him. My thirteen-year-old self-consciousness and his fifty-six-year-old discontent didn’t know what to make of each other.

It seemed like the only thing Walter and I shared was our love for the St. Louis Cardinals. Muggy but mighty moments together in the bleachers of Busch Memorial Stadium. Watching Bob Gibson dazzle and dominate National League hitters in the sixties, while Lou Brock stole bases and our hearts.

But beyond baseball, the schism between my father and me was more than a “generation gap” (a phrase you never hear any more). It felt as if a grand canyon–a dark and sinister abyss nothing like the Arizona wonder four hours north of me by car in my sixties–existed between us.

As Dad pursued my love, validation and respect, I withdrew further into the fear and anxiety of my crowded teenage closet. My sister and mother felt the weight of Dad’s unhappiness and family drama too.

Yet, fifty years ago with Walter behind the wheel of our boxy Chevy Biscayne, the Johnson family from the St. Louis suburbs (Walter, Helen, Diane and Mark) threw caution to the wind and set sail on a summer vacation.

Our destination? Huntersville, North Carolina–seventeen miles north of Charlotte–where we would spend a week with my mother’s family on the rocky-but-fertile ground of my grandparents’ farm in the Tar Heel State.

Past the midpoint of our journey, we drove up and around the hairpin curves of the Great Smoky Mountains of Tennessee. Dad guided our clunky sedan into town, where we were welcomed by the grits and glitz of Gatlinburg.

Spontaneously, soon after we parked, we decided to board a ski lift (technically, the Gatlinburg Skylift) into the August mist. Mom and Diane boarded first. Dad and I trailed behind, climbing over the tall trees shrouding Crockett Mountain. I don’t remember much more about the day. Only that it felt as if the four of us had escaped our troubles into the clouds of Tennessee for a few hours.

More than five decades have passed. Since 2017, I’ve more closely identified with my father and his plight, because of my advancing age and our shared mild heart attack experiences separated by fifty-five years.

The grief for Dad has felt more palpable to me in the past three weeks, because the baseball team we loved and cheered for in the humidity of St. Louis summers–the team I still love today–has suffered through a COVID-19 outbreak; to date ten players and eight staff members of the St. Louis Cardinals have tested positive for the virus.

When the outbreak first appeared in late July, the team quarantined in a Milwaukee hotel for several days before heading back to St. Louis to live in isolation in early August, like so many ordinary citizens in a country consumed by viral hot spots.

During that time, the other twenty-nine Major League Baseball teams played on. But the St. Louis Cardinals sequestered themselves for more than two weeks, hoping for a string of several consecutive days of negative testing, which would clear them to resume their season on the field.

As the Cardinals season went dormant, I felt depressed. A portion of my past and present life had been pealed away and thrown in the dumpster. It was as if the last remnant of the troubled father I loved (a man who fought for his country and died in 1993) had been stripped away and laid to rest. His team. My team. Our team had become another COVID-19 casualty.

Finally, the fog–like a Gatlinburg mist–has begun to lift. This morning Diane sent me a text from her suburban Chicago home. “Cards driving forty rental cars via I-55 to Chicago … Playing fifty-plus games in forty days. Hope you’re feeling better. Love you!”

Indeed, on Friday, August 14 the St. Louis Cardinals are driving in separate cars from St. Louis to Chicago to resume their baseball season on Saturday. After a seventeen-day hiatus, Dad’s, Diane’s and my redbirds will resume their baseball season on August 15. They will play a doubleheader against the Chicago White Sox and a third game on Sunday, before a five-game set (including two more doubleheaders) against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field.

The Cardinals will begin the long climb back with a new batch of young players from their farm system on their roster and a veteran, big-game pitcher–thirty-eight-year-old Adam Wainwright–on the mound. He’ll start Game One in the Windy City.

If the Cardinals are able to finish their season, they will complete fifty-five contests in the following forty-four days. It will require a herculean effort by a team with a rich history. Eleven World Series championships, more than any other National League franchise.

No matter how this version of the Cardinals perform, I feel the tide of hope returning. Seeing them back on the baseball diamond will feel like a victory. Plus, Diane and I will still have each other, our bittersweet memories of family vacations, and a string of glorious years to recall cheering with Dad for Gibson, Brock and the Cardinals.

Now, our 2020 team is about to take the field to restore a little of sanity to our world. As they do, I have the memory of Dad and me side-by-side on a yellow chairlift. Him with his trusty Daily Word magazine of inspirational thoughts tucked in his shirt pocket. Me smiling, but brimming with worry as I gripped the lap bar tightly.

In spite of our differences then, Dad and I had much more in common beyond baseball in 1970 than I knew or ever imagined. Together, we were fighting for survival. Riding high in Gatlinburg.

 

 

 

 

 

 

10 thoughts on “Riding High in Gatlinburg

  1. I’m glad you were able to write this piece.
    Your writing about baseball has such straightforward energy!
    And your reminiscences are emotionally valuable.
    Thanks for sharing this!

    Like

    1. Your love of the Cards and your Dad are so intertwined. It’s another reminder of the ties that bind and how this time if uncertainty cannot takeaway the moments and memories. Love and the Love of the Game will always prevail.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. The start of your post is familiar ground for me. My son and I are almost the exact age spread of your father and you. Also, I’ve recently emerged from a seven year stretch of depression, anxiety and mental health diagnoses. At the worst times, it was a strain on my family, especially my wife, but it was evident that my kids could feel it too. Things started lifting a couple of years ago and I’m now in the best spot I’ve been in since I don’t know when. I really appreciate them never giving up on me.

    Like

    1. I’m glad you’ve found a better place, Jeff. Every family has its challenges. The hardest part for me was seeing Dad languish. I think he could have benefitted from a more enlightened team of doctors.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. The end of your post is completely alien to me. What ever it is that attracts men (and some women) to be sports fans and root for a team is completely absent in me. Even when I was playing competitive soccer, I’d rather lose a good game than win a mediocre one. Mostly I don’t care who wins, and while I like to play, I can’t stand to watch. I constantly feel left out when I read posts like yours or when I’m in a group and people are talking about a game or a season or a player. They could be speaking latin and I’d be no less engaged.

    Like

    1. I don’t think you’re a freak at all. If it’s any help, I feel like an emotional misfit at times about this lasting tie. I can be rather competitive and get too emotionally involved. It’s both a strength and a weakness.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Dear Mark,

    I may not get to see your smiling face regularly but I feel close to you in reading your great stories. Thanks so much. Hugs to you and Tom. Carol

    On Fri, Aug 14, 2020 at 3:03 PM Mark Johnson Stories wrote:

    > Mark Johnson posted: ” In August of 1970, I felt I had lost my father. The > trauma of his World War II emotional scars, heart disease and bi-polar > diagnosis had consumed him. My thirteen-year-old self-consciousness and his > fifty-six-year-old discontent didn’t know what to make” >

    Like

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s