Songs of a Lifetime

Originally posted on OD November 10, 2000

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I love Kris Kristofferson. Always have. Layers of armor built up over a lifetime fly away like confetti in a windstorm as his deep gravely voice finds every hiding place I have.

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Sunday Mornin’ Comin’ Down

I woke up Sunday Mornin’

With no way to hold my head that didn’t hurt

And the beer I had for breakfast wasn’t bad

So I had one more for dessert

Then I fumbled thorough my closet for my clothes

And found my cleanest dirty shirt

Then I shaved my face and combed my hair

And stumbled down the stairs to meet the day

I’d smoked my brain the night before

On cigarettes and songs that I’d been picking

But I lit my first and watched a small kid

Cussing at the can that he was kicking

Then I crossed the empty street

And caught the Sunday smell of someone frying chicken

And it took me back to something

That I ‘d lost somehow somewhere along the way

On a Sunday Mornin’ Sidewalk

Wishin’ Lord that I was stoned

Cause there’s something in a Sunday

Makes a body feel alone

And there’s nothing short of dying

Half as lonesome as the sound

On the sleeping city sidewalks

Sunday mornin’ comin’ down.

In the park I saw a daddy

With a laughing little girl who he was swinging

And I stopped beside a Sunday school

And listened to a song that they were singing

Then I headed back for home

And somewhere far away a lonely bell was ringing

And it echoed through the canyons

Like the disappearing dreams of yesterday.

On a Sunday mornin’ sidewalk

Wishin’ Lord that I was stoned

Cause there’s something in a Sunday

Makes a body feel alone

And there’s nothing short of dying

Half as lonesome as the sound

On the sleeping city sidewalks

Sunday mornin’ comin’ down.

…on a sunday mornin’ sidewalk

wishing lord that I was stoned

cause there’s something in a sunday

makes a body feel alone…

K. Kristofferson

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This song was written about Daddy. The words reflect his life as I imagine it to be during his self-inflicted absences from the lives of all those he loved. Time and again he would suddenly disappear. One day he was part of our lives and the next day he was gone. In his younger years, during his 20’s, his time-outs from life were relatively short in duration – a year or so. In later years, they stretched out as long as ten years with no word from him.

I never knew where he went or why he was gone. At times I’d hear whispers or snatches of conversations which included references to California, Arizona, or other place far removed from the deep south. I also remember hushed references to drinking and “pills” at various times. I knew instinctively that during those times he was absent from our lives, he had demons to wrestle and that he was alone, even when he wasn’t.

The first time I ever heard the song, I was amazed at how accurately it described Daddy and all I knew he must be feeling. I see him still, strumming a guitar with a cigarette dangling jauntily out of the corner of his mouth, his eyebrows arched and his eyes half closed against the smoke wafting upwards against his face.

Daddy never left the house without looking his best. His shoes were always spit-shined, clothes just so and his wavy black hair precisely in place. The song got it right, he’d have searched for his most presentable clothes and would never have gone out without shaving.

I see him in the damp morning fog lighting his cigarette, hands cupped to protect the flame from the wind. Then he continues down the street with his signature cocky step, not even wrinkled clothes and a black hangover able to diminish his dark good looks.

Seeing the children as he walked down the street would send his thoughts winding back to us. The little boy kicking the can would become my little brother. He’d remember his white hair and his chubby fists clutching dandelions he had picked in the afternoons when Daddy took us to the park. He’s see his blue eyes and how they lit up each time Daddy walked in the door.

The little girl on the swing would be me laughing and squealing as Daddy swung me way too high as he always did. He’d hear my voice calling “Shug” short for sugar – my nickname for him. Remembering us would make him smile for a moment.

He was born and raised in the deep south where Sunday meant Sunday School, church bells and fried chicken. Just as in the song, those things would have turned his thoughts homeward. When that happened, the guilt must have competed with the hangover for his attention. I always held the belief that he thought of us while he was gone. I wanted him to. I think he must have.

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April 5, 2002

I remember this entry. It moved me again, just as it did originally. I find myself wondering now who knew some of the stories of his times away and how it was for your mother.

April 5, 2002

xo

I skipped to today but will read the rest. This one hit me hard. My ex is now a recovering alcoholic, but when he was drinking (the first 14 years of our marriage), this was his favorite song. You took me back. I still can’t hear Kristofferson without tearing up.

April 6, 2002

I love this song and this entry. Personalizing songs in this manner is so comforting! I tend to do it a lot myself, and songs pulls me through some hard times. (I emailed you some instructions. I hope they work!)

gel
April 6, 2002

I remember this from before too. I think it made me run for that tape the last time.

Wow, this is a very touching, moving entry. Thanks. Hugs

April 6, 2002

i like this idea of using a song hat has meaning to us personally as a framework to hang memories and reflections on. been having all these “mother'” things coming up lately and was casting about for a way to approach the writing. this gives m some ideas. thanks!

Makes me think of the ripples in a pond. How the words of Kristofferson reached you & then your words about his words reached others…how your father’s demons & aloneness created other demons & different aloneness for his children…& how his love for you fed your love back for him. In my heart of hearts, I know he loved his precious daughter, as so many of us do. “I love Patalija. Always have.”

Dear sweet patalija, such a poignant story. Yes, I have no doubt that he loved you. Whatever the stream was that carried him away, only he knew. That he returned, be it after long gaps, was his way of saying: dear heart I do love you…For all the wounds we have in life, there is none so heartfelt as those of love! Be assured, you are indeed loved very much.Hugs

April 6, 2002

Thank you for your sweet note dreamin~. You are so eloquent with words, you really would do us all a favor by having your own diary here. Or, maybe you already do…under another name, perhaps?

April 6, 2002

Dear Kalestra – I think we were simultaneously visiting each other. I just went over to welcome you home, as I saw a note on another diary which let me know you were here 🙂 It’s so good to have you back although I know you needed to get away. We are all watching, listening and praying about all that is happening. Hugs

RYN I answered it on my entry, your question about the accident, that is 🙂

April 6, 2002

RYN: Glad you’re having fun! I don’t know how to wrap around a pic yet. You can get the language from a page where someone has wrapped around an image by going to “View” at the top of your screen and choosing source. With “view source” you can see their html language and learn. Center is easy before text to be centered and to turn centering off.

April 6, 2002

Whoops. Sorry after the “r” in center! If I do it here it doesn’t show. Close with bracket.

April 6, 2002

Whoops. Sorry after the “r” in center! If I do it here it doesn’t show. Close with bracket.

I remember this entry. :o) ryn: I went private for a while because I had reasons to believe that certain people I didn’t want to read were reading. I will keep up both private and public entries. If you want to read the “private” I have a readers password for them. Does that make sense?

reyn, i lived in nashville, drove down and married the toad. 🙂 we’re on the east side of mobile bay, between that and pensacola, down there in the southern reaches. I don’t go to mobile often, can’t breathe there, too much stuff in the air. Been to Athens TN, but never Athens Greece. 🙂

Had to make fried chicken, first time in the southern way, neighbor taught me. I must say, it’s sure slippery!

I remember this entry also…still quite moving.