A photo from my birthday party in elementary school. Dave is on the left; I'm in the middle. Notice the matching white muscle shirts! |
A few weeks ago I learned that my childhood friend, David,
died on January 9, 2020, after a long battle with multiple myeloma. He
was a man of many talents and was an accomplished attorney and mover and shaker
in Washington, D.C. (see video, below). But to me he will always be my first best friend.
Anne Lamott says that anyone who has
survived childhood has enough material to write about for the rest of their
lives. I suggest a key criterion for surviving childhood is having a best
friend. It would be impossible to overstate the importance. That first
connection outside our immediate family with someone who gets us, someone who
shares our interests, someone who makes us laugh, someone we can talk with about
anything, share secrets with, and ask the questions we are too embarrassed
to ask our parents likely goes a long
way toward establishing our healthy self image and giving us a model and
comparison for all of the friends we will make in the future.
For C. S. Lewis, it was Arthur Greeves,
a boy of the same age in his Belfast neighborhood, who invited teenage Jack
over for a visit on one of his holidays from boarding school. On that first
meeting the two discovered their mutual love of reading—especially stories
about Norse mythology—and music, and they would maintain a lifelong
correspondence and friendship in spite of their differences (e.g., Arthur was
gay; Lewis was not).
Clive Staples Lewis had an unusual
first and middle name, which is likely why he declared at the age of 3 that he
wanted to be called Jacksie (later shortened to Jack). My first best friend
also had an unusual name, but it was his last name, Tittsworth, that would lead
to endless teasing by his classmates in elementary and junior high school and
would cause him as a college student to consider legally changing his name.
(Reportedly, when he approached his dad with the idea, George Tittsworth asked,
what’s wrong with the name David?)
Dave and I met as members of the 4th grade class
at Black Elementary in Wichita, Kansas. We had been selected for the class as
part of an initiative to provide a unique learning environment for “gifted”
students. The class size was small, and the instruction was designed to interest
students who, based on their test scores, were, presumably, ready for a greater
academic challenge than was offered in their regular elementary school classes.
Of course, I wasn’t seeking, at the age of 10, greater
academic challenges. All I really cared about was whether the teachers were
nice and what the other kids in the class were like. The main change I noticed initially
was that my mom had to drive me to school and pick me up each day. Before that,
I had gone to my neighborhood school and I walked to and from school.
I liked the other students in my new school though I only
remember a few of them today. I remember Eugene Gilden, an extremely outgoing
fellow, who greeted me on the first day of class with a hearty “Hi, I’m Eugene.
Welcome to Black Elementary!” I remember Brian Slabosky, who had a sizeable gap
between his two front teeth that allowed him to perform impressive tricks at
the water fountain, much to our amusement. And I remember David Tittsworth. He
and I hit it off immediately and were soon spending afternoons after school at
each other’s houses.
Dave lived in the Riverside neighborhood, about three miles
from my house in the Indian Hills neighborhood of Wichita. Dave’s mom would
have passed our house when driving her son to and from school at Black
Elementary. Our moms had the thankless task of chauffeuring us back and forth
between each other’s houses.
C. S. Lewis suggests that friendship has to be about
something—some common interest that causes two acquaintances to become friends.
What did Dave and I have in common—besides being two boys in the same small
elementary school class? First, sports. I had fallen in love with basketball
early. I don’t know if Dave had before we met, but I remember we spent lots of
hours refining our jump shots on the hoop that my dad had installed at the edge
of our garage roof at the 13th street house. The long driveway
provided ample room for us to practice, not only layups and mid-range shots,
but what would have been three pointers, had the three-point shot actually
existed in those days. When the Kansas winter set in, we moved to the
basement of our house where we could play ping pong or pool. We spent most of
our time at the pool table. My Uncle Jim had managed to find a couple of sturdy,
slate pool tables in a bar/pool hall that was closing down in a rural
Kansas town and had purchased one for himself and one for my dad. Moving the
heavy slate and solid wood table down the long, narrow steps to our basement
was a complicated operation, but, once accomplished, I thought I was the
luckiest boy on earth to have a such an entertainment oasis at my disposal.
I loved playing pool with my dad, but he was a busy man. Five
days a week he was a junior high English teacher; on weekends he was the preacher for the Northside Church of Christ. So Dave became my
consistent pool playing partner.
Two boys with lively imaginations, however, can only play so
many games of 8 Ball before boredom sets in. So Dave and I would invent new
games—games that used the equipment of the table but were unrecognizable to any
player of traditional pool or billiards. The game I remember most we called
“Lag.” It worked like this: The pool balls were divided equally between the two
of us, and we would engage in a series of lag challenges. A lag in pool is when
the player strikes the ball from one end of the table to the opposite end. The
ball strikes the bumper and returns the length of the table. The goal is have
the ball come to rest as close as possible to the bumper nearest where the
player struck the ball originally. Some players use the lag contest at the
beginning of a game to determine who shoots first.
The wrinkle in our invented game was that lagging became the
game itself. Now that probably sounds like a boring game, but there’s more.
Dave and I had created names for each of our pool balls. Over time, each ball
became a team member—a character with a name, a nationality, a back story—all
of which would be narrated with great detail and seriousness before and during
each lag contest. We even created a poster with a color-coded key showing each
team member and including some significant stats about them. While I can’t
remember the specific stories we narrated about our team members, I do know the
game provided us with hours of fun and laughter.
As I write about the Lag game my friend and I invented, I’m
struck by its nerdiness. It also indicates the relative affluence and privilege
we both held as members of the white middle class. We obviously had a lot of
free time on our hands. Our parents were not asking us to do chores after
school, for example. However, another game Dave and I invented to pass the time
is embarrassing to remember. It was a game we only played once, but because it
was connected to a historically significant event, it’s one neither Dave nor I
could ever forget. I can even attach a date to this game: November 22, 1963,
the date President John F. Kennedy was assassinated. As I recall, our teacher
had announced to our class that the President had been shot and that we would
have an early release from school as a result. David came to my house, and we
were in the basement when one of us came up with idea for a new game called
“Shoot the President.” I know, it’s horrible, but, in our defense, we were 10
years old and did not grasp the seriousness of the moment.
I recently recalled this event when reading Sandra Cisneros’s The House on Mango Street with my freshman class. Cisneros tells the story of a sickly aunt who was confined to her bed and who she and her siblings and friends would sometimes visit and help. Cisneros relates how when she and her friends would play pretend, she would imitate her aunt’s awkward movements. The other children would laugh, and Cisneros confesses to enjoying their laughter. She also confesses how bad she felt when she gained enough maturity to recognize how cruel and insensitive their pretend games were. In one of our last email exchanges before my friend’s death, we recalled our twisted game from childhood. Ironically, Dave went on to have a distinguished career in government and politics in Washington, D. C., so he told me there were few people with whom he could share the story. Probably better that it remained our secret—at least until now.
I recently recalled this event when reading Sandra Cisneros’s The House on Mango Street with my freshman class. Cisneros tells the story of a sickly aunt who was confined to her bed and who she and her siblings and friends would sometimes visit and help. Cisneros relates how when she and her friends would play pretend, she would imitate her aunt’s awkward movements. The other children would laugh, and Cisneros confesses to enjoying their laughter. She also confesses how bad she felt when she gained enough maturity to recognize how cruel and insensitive their pretend games were. In one of our last email exchanges before my friend’s death, we recalled our twisted game from childhood. Ironically, Dave went on to have a distinguished career in government and politics in Washington, D. C., so he told me there were few people with whom he could share the story. Probably better that it remained our secret—at least until now.
Besides our love for playing and watching sports, another
common bond that Dave and I shared was that we came from families where church
was central to our home life. Dave and his family were members of the Methodist Church, and his father, as I recall, was the music minister and choir
director. Like my dad, Dave's father worked two jobs: in addition to his
church work, he was a State Farm insurance agent. My family were members of the
Northside Church of Christ where my dad was the preaching minister. As
mentioned above, my dad’s other job was as a junior high English teacher.
I think this similarity between our family priorities was
significant for our relationship. In our younger years as friends, it provided
some shared boundaries of behavior that no doubt made our parents feel good
about the two of us spending time together. As we moved into our teenage years,
we shared the experiences of testing some of those boundaries as we
experimented with smoking and drinking—practices that would have been
prohibited in each of our households. Finally, I’m sure both of us felt the
added burden of being sons of church leaders. In those days it was not uncommon
for church leader parents to put added pressure on their children to be “extra
good” so as to be role models for the other kids at church. Of course, that
same pressure often backfired with certain kids—thus, the experimentation
mentioned above!
Though Dave and I attended different churches, one event
from our high school years stands out. It was one of the only times we
participated in a Christian gathering together. Dave’s Methodist church hosted an
evening Young Life event where teens from many different churches (or no
church) would gather to eat pizza, sing, and hear a speaker. Dave was asked to lead the
singing part of the gathering, and at some point he invited me to join him in
that. We would play our guitars and lead the group in singing Christian
songs—not hymns, but more folky singalong, camp type songs. Dave was an
accomplished musician but more on the piano than the guitar. He had only
recently taken up the guitar. I had been playing guitar since fourth grade, but
I was pretty introverted and shy in those days, so it was a big step for me to
be on stage in front of a hundred or so peers. I’m sure I would not have been
able to do it without my friend to encourage me.
There was another way in which these events called me to step outside my comfort zone. My church sang only a cappella in its worship services. No musical instruments were allowed in the sanctuary in the tradition I grew up in. So I’m sure at the time it was something of a shock to my parents that I was singing Christian songs in a church to guitar accompaniment. To their credit, they did not forbid it—and even came to one of the events at my invitation and, as I recall, never said anything critical or negative about it. It was lots of fun. Dave was a ham, who always loved to be in front of an audience while I was a wannabe ham. I was scared to death the entire time but still enjoyed the experience. The only song I remember from those singalongs was one Dave and I invented called the “Romp-Stomp Medley.” We strung several bouncy Christian songs together (one, I think, was “This World is Not My Home/I’m just a passin’ through”) and that was our big finale.
There was another way in which these events called me to step outside my comfort zone. My church sang only a cappella in its worship services. No musical instruments were allowed in the sanctuary in the tradition I grew up in. So I’m sure at the time it was something of a shock to my parents that I was singing Christian songs in a church to guitar accompaniment. To their credit, they did not forbid it—and even came to one of the events at my invitation and, as I recall, never said anything critical or negative about it. It was lots of fun. Dave was a ham, who always loved to be in front of an audience while I was a wannabe ham. I was scared to death the entire time but still enjoyed the experience. The only song I remember from those singalongs was one Dave and I invented called the “Romp-Stomp Medley.” We strung several bouncy Christian songs together (one, I think, was “This World is Not My Home/I’m just a passin’ through”) and that was our big finale.
Music would continue to be a shared interest that drew us
together. We listened to albums together and would often try to work out our favorite
songs on our guitars. In the summer before our senior year of high school, Dave
began hanging out with a kid named Matt Mitchell. Matt was funny, quirky, and
highly intelligent. Initially, the friendship was primarily between Dave and
Matt but eventually Dave invited me and we became a threesome. We spent many
evenings at Matt’s house, where I was amazed to find that Matt was allowed to
smoke in his room, his parents obviously being much more open-minded than Dave’s
and mine. Matt introduced me to lots of great music, and he also introduced me
to Lark cigarettes, which I began to smoke occasionally and furtively during my
last year of high school Many evenings of my senior year were spent in Matt’s
room, listening to music, playing music, and singing. Matt was super creative,
as was Dave, and the two of them composed their own graduation song (“Oh, we
hate, hate, hate to graduate/When we leave, we’ll feel bereaved” etc.). I would go on to have some great musical
experiences and meet other good friends, but for sheer fun and camaraderie, I
don’t think anything eclipsed those evenings of music with Dave and Matt.
Today as I look back some fifty years, it’s difficult to
pinpoint the times when Dave and I would both have said we were best friends.
Our closeness tended to wax and wane. For sure, during the period of time when
we were in 4th through the 6th grades, I think we both would have used the best
friends label. When we moved on to the more expansive junior high population at
John Marshall Junior High, things changed. While Dave and I continued to hang
out and still visited each other’s houses, we both met new friends at our new
school. Dave was more outgoing than I and made friends more easily. I tended to
be shy and quiet and was probably much less widely known at the school. We both
made the 8th grade basketball team, but Dave also made the 7th
and 9th grade teams. Dave, with his musical talents, participated
in music and theatre, which I did not, so I’m sure he met a whole new set of
friends there. I would say in Junior High we probably moved from best friends to
good friends status. In high school, we maintained our friendship and still
were often together outside of school, but we were not together constantly as
we had been in elementary school. In our senior year, however, because of our
friendship with Matt, I probably spent more time outside of school with Dave
than I had at any time since elementary school.
Dave and I also played on the tennis team together. North
High was a large public school, at the top of the sports classification system
in Wichita, and while basketball remained our favorite sport, Dave and I both
found the competition for spots on the basketball team too fierce. So we opted
for tennis. North High had a terrible tennis team, led by the Driver’s Education
instructor, who knew absolutely nothing about coaching tennis. However, for me
it was the easiest path to achieving a letter in sports and obtaining the
coveted red leather letter jacket that helped one achieve a certain status
among one’s high school peers. Tennis, however, was still a good experience.
Though our team was terrible and lost most of our matches, we had fun at
practice and enjoyed making fun of our coach behind his back. I was the sixth
man on the six-man squad. I can’t remember where Dave fell, but I know he was
ahead of me.
Both tennis and basketball illustrated a dynamic in our friendship. Dave’s family did not place much emphasis on sports while mine
did. My dad had introduced me early on to several sports, including basketball,
golf, and tennis. If I remember correctly, Dave had not played any of these sports
much until he met me. So I think of myself as introducing him to basketball and
tennis. The other reality was that Dave was a more gifted athlete than me, so
in both cases, after being introduced to the sport, he would quickly excel me
in that sport. This was a reality I had to learn to accept because no matter
how much I practiced, I was never able to match my friend in these sports.
When it came time to move on to college, Dave chose Oral
Roberts University in Tulsa, while I chose Oklahoma Christian University in
Oklahoma City. One of my strongest memories of my early years in college was
how much I missed my high school friends, Dave and Matt. I remember writing a
poem in my sophomore year where I compared my friends to trees
and bewailed the fact that they were growing without me. Dave and I did stay in
touch during our freshman years, and we even visited each other once or twice
at college. After my freshman year, I returned to Wichita, worked a summer job,
and resumed hanging out with Dave and Matt. Dave only completed one year at ORU
before returning to Wichita and enrolling in Wichita State University. Dave and
I were both English majors. I stayed all four years at Oklahoma Christian.
Throughout the college years, our interactions were less frequent, but we
always stayed in touch and every time I visited Wichita one of my first
priorities was to see him. However, since after my freshman year, I never lived
in Wichita again, opportunities to hang out were less frequent. I did attend Dave's wedding and played a Bob Dylan song at it. David went on to the
University of Kansas Law School. I married Janet and moved to Knoxville,
Tennessee, to begin graduate school in English, and at that point we began to
lose touch.
And so from the time we were around 22 years old until our
late fifties, Dave and I had very little contact. I would hear bits and pieces
about his life in Washington, D. C., as an attorney who was becoming
influential in politics and government but these snippets often came from his
mom running into my mom at the grocery store or the mall and sharing stories
about their kids. I continued to cherish memories of my best friend, but we had
each moved on to very different lives in very different parts of the country.
Then about seven years ago, Dave and I reconnected—first on
Facebook and then through a series of email exchanges where I learned about his
diagnosis of multiple myeloma. Interestingly enough while we talked about his
health challenges and what our lives were like currently, we talked mostly
about the old days and how much we loved growing up as friends in Wichita. We
recounted our favorite memories and laughed about them. At times we would
remind each other of events the other had forgotten, thus having the pleasure of
re-remembering and reliving those days. I will cherish those communications
forever because there’s nothing like a best friend.
Here’s something strange: a couple of days before getting
news of David’s death, I had mentioned to Janet that I had been thinking about
him a lot lately. Over the Christmas break, I had gone back to rescue some old
emails from my inbox, which is when I discovered a long email string between
Dave and me when we reconnected after I learned of his health problems.
I had been mulling over the possibility of doing a road trip
to visit some of my friends from the past, including Dave. Janet said I must
have sensed something about his condition since he was so much on my mind. And
this is true. Though I had thought about other old friends—like Roger and
Richard—it was Dave that was on my mind most. They say parents often sense when
their children are in trouble or hurting, so maybe the same thing happens with
old best friends.
About two years ago I learned of the death of Matt Mitchell,
the third part of the trio of friends from my high school years. It’s weird to
think that those friends I spent so much time with no longer walk the earth. I’m
now experiencing that sense of loss again that I felt when I left my friends to
go off to college, yet in a more ultimate manner. In another, deeper sense, I
know that Dave and Matt are always with me because I have those memories, and I
know that part of who I am today is a result of those early friendships.
I miss you.
May you rest in peace.
Your friend,
Gary