Dad was not doing well while we
were at Fayetteville. He was still struggling to keep the farm going
until Harold retired from the Air Force. He had several bad spells,
and my sisters and I swapped off a lot, being there to help them
out. One really bad time, he got so weak he could not take care of
himself, Mom was not strong enough to lift him, and Jonnie and I had
a hard decision to make. We checked him in at a nursing home at Ola.
As he began to get stronger, he worked hard on creative ways to take
care of himself, including using his walking stick to help him put
his clothes on. We were finally able to take him home.
Harold retired from the Air Force,
and he moved his family back to the farm, which was his plan all
along. With Dad relieved of the responsibility of the farm, rhumatoid
arthritis became his master.
He had a stroke, and went to the
hospital at Ft. Smith. Our preacher was there at the same time I was,
once, and Dad introduced me as his "Son, a teacher at
Fayetteville."
After Dad went home, every time I
came down on the weekend to see them, the preacher kept trying to get
me to preach at his church. I told him, "That's just not my
thing." He looked puzzled by that, but he just kept on trying. I
finally realized, Because of his stroke, Dad was not speaking clearly
when he introduced me, and the preacher thought he was saying, "My
son, a PREACHER at Fayetteville." Well, I didn't waste any time
setting him straight about that, and the preacher finally left me
alone.
As I mentioned earlier, Aunt Lula
had held a grudge against Dad for decades. When Dad was in the
hospital the last time, she got my cousin Juanita to take her there.
"I've got to make things right with John." Dad was in a
final coma state when she got there. She went in, Dad came out of the
coma, and they talked a few minutes. Then Dad passed away. Lula
settled her grudge with Dad in his last few moments. Dad was 78.
By 1973, coaching was wearing
thin. I had made some key enemies among the Fayetteville coaching
staff, and that was not a pleasant time. I could tell you my side of
it, but I'm sure they have a side of it too.
I was never a good football
coach. Having never seen a football game until I was grown, I never
knew the game well enough. I judged myself a fair + basketball coach.
I never had a losing season, but that does not constitute a great
coach. I was a better teacher than coach. Some of the coaches I was
around were good coaches, but I never knew one during my coaching
career that I would judge to be a good, true man. When I read Tony
Dunge's book last year, I finally realized that good, Christian
coaches do actually exist, even at the highest level. But I never
worked with one.
My weakest team lost seven
straight games before Christmas, usually by two or three points. Some
teams, and maybe some coaches, just don't have the stuff to finish an
opponent off. The killer instinct.
I sat down during the Christmas
break, and tried to figure how we could possibly come out on top. I
looked at the schedule, marked the games I thought we could possibly
win, and those we couldn't. We came out 13-12, with every game going
the way I had it marked.
Coaching tends to suck you, all of
you, into the game, and leaves time for little else. I now had two
babies, and it was hard to be a good family man. At least, that's the
effect it had on me. I wanted out.
In August, Barb and I sold our
trailer, loaded everything in Dad's old pickup, packed the babies
into our old car, and headed for Hannibal, Mo. to a physical science
job. Barb knew I had to get out of Fayetteville, she supported me
completely, and never complained. I've never forgotten that.
When Mom found out we were
moving, she said, “I want to go with you. I could cook and clean
for you, and grow a garden.” I knew mom hated living alone. But we
had very little time to get there and get set up before school
started. I told her I would come back for her, when we got a house
and got set up. I could see the disappointment in her eyes. Had I
known what the future held, I would have done differently. I still
have a lot of trouble about the decision I made that day. Sometime, a
person just has no second chance to redo a bad decision.
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