Youth seems to go on forever, but once-in-a-while you stop and wonder . . . |
BOYS BECOMING MEN December 8, 2010 I looked around the classroom at all the boys when I was ten. The little boys with grubby nails, fingers fumbling a fountain pen. I saw them with their lunch boxes, Their Wagon Trains, and Green Hornets, and wondered if they'd make it on to manhood with no regrets. So many had their pockets full of Crayola crayons, marbles, too and rabbit's feet and bullfrogs; Bazooka bubble gum to chew. They styled their hair with Brylcreem, a few wore short crew cuts which showed off all their freckles and/or their ears as big "wing nuts". Their black school pants hung just above their mud-caked Buster Browns or silently, in Red Ball Jets, they slunk 'round the ol' school grounds. I tried to picture them in wingtips, would they ever become men? I wondered as I watched them traverse the corner fen. They played Beach Boys on their transistors, watched Roy Rogers on TV. I tried to picture them as grownups and wondered if they would ever be. Now, looking back from where I stand I realize at last that yes, indeed, those little hands have outgrown their youthful past and have somehow become husbands, fathers, even grandfathers, too that shave and go to work each day. I know all this is true because I, myself, have outgrown that little girl of ten who used to look around the classroom at the boys becoming men. |