From the time I was in elementary school until Jim went off to college, a regular Saturday afternoon activity would be my dad, my brother and me loading various athletic equipment into dad’s car and heading to the nearby State University of New York at Albany campus. The earliest memories are of baseball mitts and batting practice and learning to catch fly balls, but both boys transitioned out of baseball for our own reasons fairly quickly.
There was the occasional frisbee, lacrosse sticks briefly. The giant acres-square empty field is the best place in the world to throw an Arrobie you got for a birthday if anyone remembers what those aerodynamic super frisbee rings were, but the vast majority of my memories involve a soccer ball.
I can’t think of any particularly interesting physical descriptions of what a 12-year-old , a 15-year-old and a 40-year-old look like when they’re kicking a ball around. It was nice. Sometimes we’d go so early in spring that we’d have to retrieve a poor pass from a bit of snowdrift. Other images are sun drenched, and we’d bring along a Pizza Hut thermos full of ice water. I can see now that my dad played a hero’s game of voluntary goalkeeper and coach, and I can’t fathom the well of patience he demonstrated over the years. I will need to ask him about the experience of being on the athletic decline while your sons are on the ascendancy. Not having children on my own, I’ll defer to the reader, many of whom can speak to this from experience.
There are two indelibly vivid details of trips to SUNY that I want to mention. The first is the fascination with the difference between the speed of sound and the speed of light that came to my brain watching my brother as he kicked shots with the soccer ball against the giant backboard on the edge of the practice field over and over. From the other side of the huge practice area, seeing the ball rebound off the giant green wooden wall and then hearing that particular hollow thump arrive so late to my ears, as the ball coursed it’s way back to his feet, set my mind abuzz with wonder and questions that I would only understand years later.
The most visceral memory comes as a direct result of our frequent post-session stops at the Dairy Queen just off campus. We would order Mr. Misty‘s, which were a frozen slushy fruit drink. Invariably I would suck mine down with such ferocity that I would give myself a ”brain freeze“, that stabbing pain behind your eyes and sinuses that results from drinking cold things too quickly. It would happen to all of us so often and we never didn’t do it. I know now that laughing-at and being laughed-at-by the others was part of the love and bonding that underlay those afternoons.