July 4th, American Independence Day. It’s a day for most Americans to feel
proud. It’s full of myths of our
forefathers and mothers and the sacrifices they made. From generation to generation we pass down
the American experience, that thing we can’t quite put our finger on but we
know collectively makes this an exceptional land, a blessed land. I think about all that sitting in prison.
The 4th evokes great memories for me. 1987, early in my legal career, barely five
and a half years married, we found ourselves in London, England for ten
days. We hadn’t had a honeymoon. 1986 my first semester law school exams were
scheduled for five days after our wedding.
We had no money for a trip even if we would have had time. So, we ended up in a rustic hotel at a
Tennessee State Park two hours west of Knoxville.
1987 was our year to see the world. I hadn’t taken anytime off at the firm up
until then. You just didn’t take
vacations in a small trial firm. She
convinced me we needed to get away. The
summer before there was the miscarriage.
We’d drifted apart. There was the
dream house on the horizon, if only, if only our small starter home would sell.
We boarded the jet and headed for London. And, it was wonderful. July 4th was a Sunday. We still had three days left. What do you do on the 4th when
you’re in England? We went to the U.S.
Embassy. And I remember standing on the
wide steps of the Embassy, a sculpture of a bald eagle flying, and a passerby
snapped our picture. We were smiling, my
arm around her. And, we were in
love. It was on that trip that our older
son was conceived. We wouldn’t realize
it until weeks after our return and the dream house became a reality. July 4th in London.
July 4th, 1997.
She’s eight months pregnant with our second son. We’re staying close to
home in case of early labor. There’s a
minor league game that night in Richmond with fireworks afterwards. We go:
our ten year-old son and a friend, a very pregnant mom to be and
me. It’s sweltering hot during the
game. The sun sets, the game ends, and
the fireworks begin.
It’s an incredible display and our son and his friend “ooh”
and “ah” through the entire show. My wife
rubs her belly constantly. “I think I’m in labor”, she whispers to me on the
drive home. The explosions caused our
baby to roll and spin and kick like a whirling dervish. It wasn’t labor, but all night we were awake
watching as hands and feet stretched and kicked. It was as if the fireworks told him it’s
time, time to get out, to begin life with your family.
July 4th, 2003.
We’re at Hilton Head Island having dinner at the Quarter Deck, the
restaurant that sits at the base of the Island’s lighthouse. The sun is just beginning to set but its rays
still glimmer and shine on the waters just off Harbor Town. We eat and linger at our table waiting for
darkness and music and fireworks. It is
a perfect July 4th evening.
Our younger son sees him first: It’s
Uncle Sam. There is a tall, grey-haired
man walking around dressed as Uncle Sam.
Our son waves at him and the man comes over and says hello. I learn he’s a retired investment
banker. His yacht – a real yacht,
eighty-feet long with two decks – is less than one hundred yards from us. There are young girls in bikinis on the deck
swaying to the music. My young son sits
entranced. Uncle Sam travels on a yacht
with hot girls. He tells me he began
with nothing. “I just turned
seventy-five”, he said. “Lost my shirt,
then started again. I’m living the
American dream.”
The American dream. I
think of Uncle Sam from time to time.
His dream, that you can fail over and over and still come back and make
it. “It’s not what you start with, its
what you end with”, he said.
July 4th, 2010.
I’d been here less than eight months.
My transition from jail to prison hadn’t been easy. There’d been a year at jail where I’d seen
daylight less than seven times. My life
unwound at the jail: court, sentencing,
divorce. Every week brought some new
disaster. That year paled in comparison
to the nearly five months at receiving and my introduction to prison.
Then I ended up here, in low custody, and confronted a new
set of issues. I was surrounded by men
who made prison a way of life. In and
out they would come. Three bids, four
bids, they’d always find their way back.
And, I couldn’t comprehend it.
Life, the lives that were connected and interwoven to mine, all
separated and moved on. I found myself
alone and empty. News that would arrive
from the outside was always, it seemed, bad.
And there was little, if anything, that I could do to have any control
over my life. Its funny when you get to
that point, but words like life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness, love,
grace, they come into focus.
July 4th, 2010, my first 4th
here. It was hot, very hot and
depressing. My ex had “moved on” and was
in a new serious relationship; my older son had graduated college; my younger,
a full fledged teenager. My emotions
swung from abject despair to unreasonable hopefulness. I was like a boxer in the middle rounds who
had been pummeled over and over but who was too proud or dumb to admit
defeat. I was staggered and I wrote of
desperation and pain. Independence
Day. Independence from what, I
thought.
Late that afternoon my friend Big S asked me to head outside
with him. Wrapped up in his coat he had
four peanut butter jars full of a cloudy, orange liquid. We sat at a picnic table and he handed me a
jar. “Happy 4th of July”, he
said. I opened it and caught a whiff of
fermented oranges. “Homemade wine from
two building,” he said.
For the next hour we sat in the heat sipping off those four
jars of wine. My head spun a little; I
felt light. With the heat and the alcohol
my body, my mind meandered. “You’ll be
alright”, Big S said. “You’re tougher
and more decent than this place.” I
wasn’t sure. My heart was broken, my
life was in shambles, and the odds were stacked against me. Yet, I believed Big S. I had to.
Little known fact about the Continental Army: by 1778 most of the soldiers serving in Mr.
Washington’s corps were either convicts, slaves and freed Blacks, or poor
itinerant men. All they had was hope of
a better day.
When Mario Cuomo’s mother arrived at Ellis Island from
Greece she underwent questioning. “Why
America?” “My husband works in New
Jersey. He’s a ditch digger.” “Money?”
“A few dollars”.
“Why did you come all this way with no money and a husband who barely can
make a living digging ditches?” “Because”, she said, “someday this country will
give my son a chance to be a Governor.”
How did she know when she didn’t even have children that this country
would give her son a chance to be Governor of New York?
“We hold these truths to be self-evident,” Jefferson
wrote. “That they are endowed by their Creator
with certain unalienable rights, among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit
of happiness.”
July 4th, 2013, those twenty-nine words roll
around in my brain as I circle the track.
I’m a few miles into what will be a five mile run. Words matter.
Ideas matter. There is something
in the human spirit that strives to overcome even when the odds are stacked
against you.
You would think prison is the last place anyone would think
about Independence Day. You’d be wrong. “Freedom,”
Janis Joplin sang, “is just another word when you got nothin left to lose; nothin
ain’t nothin if it ain’t free.” Funny,
but I think Janis was wrong. When you
lose everything all you have left are those vague ideals like freedom and
happiness. And freedom isn’t the ability
to buy or do whatever you want. It’s the
power to dream and hope.
July 4th memories. You know, they play through my mind’s eye in
here but they don’t weigh me down. As I
explained to a young guy in here the other day who is soon to be released, you
can overcome, you can come back, you can succeed, even if you’ve been in a
place like this. Paul Simon’s haunting “American
Tune” has a powerful verse about life.
It goes, “I don’t know a soul who’s not been shattered or driven to his
knees.” But later he sings, “It’s
alright, it’s alright, you can be forever blessed….”
Two distinct images:
the inevitable pain and brokenness we all endure and the hope, the
blessing, the freedom. I don’t know if
that’s what Jefferson had in mind when he crafted the words to the Declaration
of Independence, but it seems right that life is difficult, and it’s painful,
and it’s hard, but you have the freedom to hope and to pursue your dreams.
July 4th.
Memories, Dreams. Freedom.