Yesterday I
went to the retirement party/celebration for a one of a kind fireman. What a
great and unique man, he is a former Marine that has and had more interests
than a single human being should have.
Many people
would think and they would be right, that just being a fireman would be
exciting enough to satisfy any thrill seeker. But not this man, here are just a
few of his other interests, bull riding and all of the Cowboy arts, boxing at a
world class event, and playing goalie for the fire department hockey team.
A man that
you never had to guess what his opinion was on anything and I mean anything,
all you had to do was ask. He was one hell of a fireman, knew his job on all
levels, and was a willing and generous mentor to not only the new recruit but
to many a firefighter and even more officers.
He is the kind
of guy that I am pretty sure wanted nothing to do with a party that singled him
out for recognition, but he did it anyway. Because he is a team player and
having a retirement party isn’t about the guy going, it is about the ones left
behind and the ones that came before.
So congratulations Gator and welcome to the club. I'm sure you feel about it much the way Groucho Marks did.
"I wouldn't be a member of any club, that would have me as a member."
The decision
to have a retirement party is totally up to the individual fireman it is never
forced on them. I remember as I was leaving the job I felt no desire to have a
party. After all, I hadn’t gone out the way I wanted, I had been shown the door
as I had reported to work hung-over and still had a testable blood alcohol
level.
Why would I
ever have a party? To celebrate being a drunk that was kicked off the job? To give
all the haters a chance to say I told you what a loser he was? These were the
thoughts I had, it felt better to just slink away like the disgrace I felt I
was and leave all that in the past.
I spoke
about how I felt in an AA meeting and about my plan to quietly retire. After the
meeting a man I very much admire, a former Army Ranger pulled me aside.
“Got a
minute Tim?” he asked.
“Sure.” I
said.
“I heard
what you were saying about not having a party for your retirement and I just
wanted to give you my take on that. It’s not about you, you dumbshit, it’s
about the other firemen. It’s about giving them a chance to wish you well, to
thank you for your service, and to recognize your contribution to the job.
You weren’t
a drunk your whole career and even if you were that doesn’t define you. Did you
help others? Did you try to give back? Did you mentor other guys? Did you make
a difference? Because I’m betting you did, and you know what there are some
that want to tell you that, that want to show their respect.”
“So put on
your big boy panties and have a fucking party, because it ain’t about you.” He patted
me on the shoulder, went and jumped on his Harley and drove away. I will always
thank him for that and I do.
Being a narcissist
what he said had never crossed my mind. What did he mean it wasn’t about me
everything is about me damn it? I thought about what the Ranger had told me and
I asked other friends and family what they thought about it. All the feedback I
got was to have the party, so I did.
I faced my
fears and for me it really was freighting. I knew what I thought of myself and
therefore felt that had to be how everyone else felt about me. I was a loser, a
disgrace to myself and the job I loved, a drunk, I remembered nothing but all
the bad I had done.
I just knew
nobody would show up and that was probably the biggest fear, to be left with
that final insult and 3 gallons of punch and 2 uneaten sheet cakes, although I
knew out of depression and empathy my crew would do their best to hide that evidence.
So just
before the appointed start time I sat in the kitchen at the Hero House, 7s and awaited
my fate. My crew God bless them had really done a nice job with the concession stand;
there was enough cake for the whole job and gallons of punch. I think some of
them were as nervous as I was.
The kitchen
door swung open and in walked my first lieutenant from station 4 where I was a “Donkey”
I hadn’t seen the man in probably 20 years as he had retired not long after I
came on the job. I looked at him and for the life of me had no idea why he was
there.
“Bob what
are you doing here?” I asked. He looked around the kitchen for a moment.
“Aren’t you
retiring today?” he asked.
“Well yeah,”
I answered.
“Well I’m
here for that.” he stuck out his hand and shook mine.
“Congratulations
on making it, because there were days I doubted you would. I knew either one of
the guys would kill you or you’d kill yourself the way you went at Tim. You
were one hell of a fireman.” and off he went.
I sat there
stunned I couldn’t for the life of me understand why this man from my past who
I had only worked for for three short months had shown up. Why make the effort
for me?
And then I
found out. These retirement parties are the only place all the old dudes get to
see each other, have some cake, a cup of Joe and talk about the good old days.
It had nothing to do me and I was glad to have given them a venue to catch up
on each other, because that is what I do know, because I am one of the old
dudes and proud of it.
1 comment:
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