Solace in the Spring
Over the course of fifty years, I've played golf seldom enough to keep my beginner’s luck in tact. It’s been years since I’ve swung a club, so even that statement may no longer be true, but I used to be able make par on a handful of holes with years between games. This was very frustrating to my friends who golfed regularly, but the truth is:
I’m not a golfer. Neither is Enoch, but I do want to tell you about last spring when some of his classmates coaxed him to "try out" for our Calvary golf team.
Enoch borrowed some clubs from his “brother in law” (or as he puts it: “the husband of my American sister, Natalie") and began going to golf practice in late March.
“How was golf?” I would ask.
Michigan never quite knows when to turn the page on winter. It can still be freezing cold in April, and this was a particularly blustery day. Enoch had no gloves. I offered him some that were in the car but he declined. “I will borrow golf gloves from a friend,” he said. I winced because golf gloves are very thin. "Use your pockets if your hands get cold," I said to a closing door.
“Dad,…” [I should explain that some time between January and April, Enoch began calling Julie and I "Mom and Dad." This was not an easy decision for him. At school, students often call us "Mr. K" and "Mrs. K," but this did not feel right for Enoch, and one day at breakfast, he explained that even though his real mom and dad are in China, it would be much easier to say "Mom and Dad" if that would be okay. This made sense. But quite often when Enoch says the word “dad," he elongates it into a two syllable word that drops a note mid-way through like a door chime.]
“Da-ad, can you come get me?”
"Not at all. Enoch. You didn't fail. Until a few weeks ago, you'd never swung a club. I just thought it might be worth a try to see if you like it. In this case, giving something a try gives you the right not to continue, but that is not failing. You succeeded at trying. That’s all anyone can ask of you. There are sometimes in life when you cannot quit trying because... well... it's important to keep going, but... I would never make you keep chasing golf balls in the cold if it's not something you enjoy."
"So why do I feel bad?"
"Well... I suppose you're disappointed, but that only means you really tried, right? There are lots of things I have tried and failed at, but do you know what is really sad? There are some things I think I might be good at, but I have not tried them."
"Why?" he asked.
"Because I'm afraid of the difference between what I think I'm good at and what others think is good. Does that make sense?"
He nodded. I realized that I was talking to myself out loud as much as I was talking to Enoch. I suppose that is the nature of advice whenever age talks to youth.
Then in the distance I heard Beethoven and wondered who was in the house.
Enoch noticed me recording him with my phone, but it did not seem to bother him at all.
I recalled a previous conversation many weeks before when Enoch told me that his mother made him take piano lessons as a child, but he did not like and quit. The level of playing I was watching reflected a much longer story.
When he was done, I put down my phone and said, "Okay, Enoch. Tell me more about those lessons you took as a child. You are very good."
"No. I am only so-so. I have not played a piano in many years."
"You've walked past this piano for four months and never been tempted to play?"
"No. I did not want to. It is bad memories for me."
"How so?"
"My mother knew a very famous concert pianist in our city. This friend knew we were poor and told her that she would teach me lessons but not charge. She did this for free. And so every week for seven years, I had to go to that lady's house [apartment] for piano, but I did not like it at all."
"So you were seven when you started?"
"Yes. Elementary school at first, but as I got older, I had long days at school...homework... church...and then piano. My mother made me practice many hours each week--not on a piano because we do not have a piano... on one of those keyboard things. It plugged in.”
"Most kids do not like it until they get past the notes on the page and the song is inside them. Our first two daughters took piano, but it never really took them. Natalie [our youngest] learned to love it."
"I never felt good enough. I make mistakes, and I knew I would never be a concert pianist."
"Very few people ever get that good, but they still play piano. You are good. Why did you quit?
"My mother made me play until the Government put my father prison. Things got hard then. It just happened. She let me quit piano."
"Has it been that long since you played?" He nodded yes. "I think it would make your parents very happy to know that you have not forgotten how."
"I made many mistakes, but it did feel good to know I could still read the music."
"Our daughter Natalie used to spend many evenings here. We did not make her do it. She enjoyed it. I would lie on the couch and listen to her. I miss that. It is very good to hear it again, so please make yourself at home and play whenever you want for as long as you want."
He smiled, and began playing again.
To this day, neither of us has talked about why it was on that particular day after feeling like he had failed at golf that he suddenly went down to the "parlor," turned on the piano light, adjusted the bench, slid back the wooden lid, thumbed through the Schirmer's collection, and began playing notes that had not coursed through his fingers for over three years.
On that night, mistakes did not matter to him. The notes on the page went from eyes to brain to memory and to a song that brought him solace in the spring. It does not happen every evening or even every week. Playing piano is not something he HAS TO DO, but like the shepherd David at his lyre, it is something that soothes his restless mind when his thoughts are far away.