By In order to widen my perspectives and earn a living I started
ghostwriting privately published autobiographies for a fee. The tales
below are true, although identities are disguised.
Although it seldom snowed that far south one winter when Mary was seven an icy blast brought freezing rain. It was a rare chance for the town’s kids to slide around on the streets and sidewalks in their shoes. They called it ice-skating. Since auto and pedestrian traffic gradually ruined most of the ice as the day progressed, Mary and her friends looked for a spot uncorrupted by adults.
Mary volunteered the hotel’s roof and led her friends up the fire escape. Soon a porter discovered the frolicking children. He ran into her uncle’s office breathlessly describing the situation. Her uncle hurried up the fire escape, ordered Mary’s friends home, and took the girl to his office.
Reminiscing 75 years later Mary said, “I don’t ever recall dad being so angry. I was never so ashamed.”
I asked, “Did your uncle spank you?”
After jerking her face upward a bit and dropping her jaw, Mary began gently shaking her head: “My dad never laid a hand on me. The shame I felt was bad enough. I could not endure his disapproval. That’s all it took to make me behave.”
As an adult Mary moved to Florida and raised a family with her only husband. Presently the eighty-something widow teaches a college art class. She always refers to her uncle as her dad.
“Don’t worry son. Stay at 12-cents, like I said.”
***
Two years before Castro took over Cuba,
Faustino was twelve and returning on a flight to Havana from Miami where
his dad took him on a shopping trip. Over the straights of Florida one
of the airliner’s four engines caught fire. After efforts to extinguish
the flames remotely failed a steward announced the pilot decided to
ditch the plane.
Recently Faustino told me, “I’ll never
forget the panic in his face. Some passengers began to scream as he told
us to buckle our seatbelts, put on life vests, remove our shoes, and
brace for the impact.”
Despite the steward’s attempt to stop him
Faustino’s dad disobeyed. He unbuckled his seatbelt and knelt in front
of the boy where his body could act as a modern-day airbag. He told the
child, “Once the plane stops, get out. Don’t wait for me.”
Fortunately when the airplane nearly reached sea level the flames
went out. The plane was diverted to a Cuban military airbase instead of
Havana’s municipal airport. But at least the touchdown was with wheels
on dry land.
The scariest episode of Faustino’s life
taught him that he was his dad’s number one priority. Consequently, the
boy resolved that he would never intentionally do anything to disgrace
the family name. Thereafter Faustino took all of his dad’s advice
seriously because he knew – beyond a shadow of doubt – that his father
always had Faustino’s best interests at heart.
The boy’s family escaped Castro’s Cuba for
Florida in the early 1960s. Like most refugees they had no money. Within
weeks of arriving Faustino’s dad held down three jobs. But nothing
ranked higher in the dad’s priority than the boy’s education.
Earlier this year Faustino told me, “Even though I was only sixteen
dad announced that I was to start electrical engineering college
courses. I never questioned the decision. When I brought the University
of Florida diploma home after four years, dad hung it on the wall of his
home office where it remained until he died 35 years later.”
As an adult Faustino left Florida and
became prosperous in Silicon Valley where he worked with some of the
era’s legendary figures. Recently I asked how he could be comfortable
taking risk on volatile start-up businesses.
Faustino said, “Although dad never
explicitly told me that I could recover from failures, I felt
instinctively that I could because of his example. Upon arriving in
Florida dad possessed almost nothing, yet he made a good life for our
family. Additionally, the unconditional family love left me feeling that
even if I did fail, there was a parachute.”
During most of his career Faustino lived
3,000 miles distant from his dad. Nonetheless, they talked on the phone
almost every day. Typically his dad asked, “Are you okay? Do you need
any money?”
***
Mary was two years old during the Great Depression when her mother
gave the girl to the baby’s aunt and uncle. The otherwise childless
couple managed a hotel in a small Mississippi town not far from New
Orleans.Although it seldom snowed that far south one winter when Mary was seven an icy blast brought freezing rain. It was a rare chance for the town’s kids to slide around on the streets and sidewalks in their shoes. They called it ice-skating. Since auto and pedestrian traffic gradually ruined most of the ice as the day progressed, Mary and her friends looked for a spot uncorrupted by adults.
Mary volunteered the hotel’s roof and led her friends up the fire escape. Soon a porter discovered the frolicking children. He ran into her uncle’s office breathlessly describing the situation. Her uncle hurried up the fire escape, ordered Mary’s friends home, and took the girl to his office.
Reminiscing 75 years later Mary said, “I don’t ever recall dad being so angry. I was never so ashamed.”
I asked, “Did your uncle spank you?”
After jerking her face upward a bit and dropping her jaw, Mary began gently shaking her head: “My dad never laid a hand on me. The shame I felt was bad enough. I could not endure his disapproval. That’s all it took to make me behave.”
As an adult Mary moved to Florida and raised a family with her only husband. Presently the eighty-something widow teaches a college art class. She always refers to her uncle as her dad.
***
For nearly a century strawberries have been
a big crop in the west central part of Florida’s peninsula. Until the
1970s fresh berries were customarily shipped by railroad to major
markets such as New York and Chicago. Since the berries were perishable
it was best to ship them quickly after picking. At harvest time shippers
bought the fruit at auctions located near rail-side packing plants.
Owing to its perishability, buyers had to
monitor a number of variables affecting the fruit’s value at
destination. Among the biggest problems was freeze damage resulting from
infrequent winter blasts into central Florida. Freeze damaged berries
began to rot as they rode the rails northward.
During the 1920s and 30s Roger Foster’s dad
sold fresh fruits in New York, originally from a pushcart. After the
business grew big enough to operate a company-owned packing plant the
family moved to Florida, while business partners managed the New York
operation. Thereafter, Roger worked with his dad and brother at the
Florida plant.
Sometime during the late 1940s a freeze
stretched down into central Florida on a Thursday night. On Friday
morning Roger’s dad told him to buy all the strawberries he could get at
auction for 12-cents a pint. Although Roger was puzzled about why his
dad wanted to buy damaged fruit, he began the morning auction by
purchasing berries at the specified price. Soon, however,
Roger questioned his dad’s judgment and phoned the office.
“Dad, I don’t need to be paying 12-cents a
pint. There are almost no other buyers. I can get all the berries we
want at 8-cents a pint.”
“That’s okay. Just pay 12-cents like I said.”
Shaking his head, Roger returned to the auction and complied. But after another hour or so he phoned a second time.
“Dad, 12-cents a pint is too much. I can probably get all we want at 6-cents a pint.”“Don’t worry son. Stay at 12-cents, like I said.”
By the end of the auction Roger had
purchased an entire railcar-load of berries, which was shipped to New
York that afternoon. The next auction was the following Monday. Due to
Friday’s unusual bidding, on Monday morning Roger asked his dad for
instructions on the new day’s auction.
“Just go through the motions of participating. Don’t buy anything. Merely pretend to be competing.”
With knitted eyebrows Roger asked, “Why
dad? Why did you have me pay 12-cents a pint on Friday but only want me
to pretend to be buyer on today?”
“Our Friday shipment sold well in New York
because there were few other supplies available. When today’s shipment
arrives in the city, New Yorkers will have already tasted the
freeze-damaged goods we shipped on Friday. They won’t buy anymore
berries for a while.”
Roger and his dad passed away years ago, but Roger’s son, Gary, presently runs the $100 million business.
***
Ed Sanders grew up in the 1930s and 40s on
his dad’s north Florida turpentine farm. Since nearly all the workers
were African-American, Ed’s first friend was a black boy the same age.
Although named Joshua, Ed called him Cousin. If there had been a nearby
river the boys would have been 20th century salt-and-pepper versions of
Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn.
Since wild animals were abundant in Florida
woods, Ed’s dad wore a holstered pistol. Sometimes the boys used their
dog to distract snakes as they sneaked-up behind the reptiles to behead
them with sticks. They carried the decapitated bodies home like a couple
of cats proudly dragging along assorted victims.
Ed was five years old when one of the
turpentine workers got in a fight with a white man at a nearby town.
Ed’s dad took his employee to a hospital. That night the KKK arrived in
Ed’s front yard and torched a small cross. Ed’s dad stepped onto the
porch with an unloaded shotgun and a box of shells. He listened to the
Klan complaints long enough to identify the leaders.
Suddenly he loaded the shotgun, snapped it
shut, and announced, “We’re done talking.” Pointing to the ringleader he
said, “I’ve got two shells in this gun. The first is for you.” Facing
to the leader’s sidekick he added, “and the second one is for you.”
Nodding to his holstered pistol he concluded, “If any more of you want
trouble I’ve got my six-shooter.” After a moment that seemed like an
hour to Ed the group dispersed.
Later that year Ed and Joshua were waiting
with Ed’s dad at a bus stop to attend their first day of school in the
first grade. When the bus door opened Ed’s dad motioned for him to go
aboard. The boy turned to Joshua and said, “Come on Cousin, let’s go.”
Ed’s dad interrupted, “Cousin’s not going.”
After a pause, Ed started to back down the steps saying, “Well, if Cousin’s not going, I’m not going.”
But his dad stopped Ed in his tracks by saying, “Yes you are. Cousin is taking another bus.”
In adulthood Ed became a thriving
businessman who was invited to the White House several times and Joshua
had a successful military career. Presently the two old friends talk
monthly by telephone.
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