(This post was first posted fifteen years ago today)
Every Groundhog Day I'm reminded of my grandfather, as this was his
birthday. I have no idea what year he was born, but my grandma was born
in 1902 (or, as my father would say, "The year after Queen Victoria
died), so I would guess round there. He owned a hardware store up in
Lowell Massachusetts, which was great because every coupla years we'd go
up to visit and he'd give us hockey sticks from his store. Which were
great...until we'd get back to VA, where it would be 100 degrees and
we'd be reminded that we have no idea what the fuck hockey is. My
favorite memory of him though is one time when I was in 3rd grade, he
was down visiting, and he drove me into town. We ended up at Peoples, I
don't know what he was buying, but we were standing in line and my
young buck eyes landed on...PLAYBOY!!!!! Instinctively my little horny
mitts grabbed it and started peeping into it, lost in my own world.
After what seemed like an hour but what I'm sure was actually 12 seconds
I realized what i was doing, looked up and...Grandpa was watching me.
Oh shit, I thought. He's gonna take me into the parking lot and bury me
under the asphalt. I slipped the mag back and awaited for the end of
my all-too-brief life when I looked up at him and...he winked, laughed
and said "dont worry, I wont tell your father." YES!!! But the day got
even better, when in a spur-of-the-moment let's bond together moment he
reached out and grabbed a radio and bought it for me. Awesome. i
loved that radio, even christianing it with a GI Joe sticker on top. I
made it through a few years of the stupid Q94 morning zoo and all those
early 80's hits, holding up my tape recorder to the speaker and
patiently waiting for one of my new cuts to come on so I could record it
and many mornings tuned to WRAR, either answering the morning quiz and
calling in, or breathlessly praying that school was cancelled for the
day thanks to snow (3 flakes would paralyze our county, which drove my
mother bananas, her coming from Lowell where apparently the snow could
reach 60 feet high and they'd still go to school.) But the real prize
came when I found Extra 104 up in DC, and the world of 50/60s music was
opened to me in one fell swoop. i was astounded as right there on one
station came Wipeout! and Stand by Me and Have I The Right, one
after another. I bonded with friends over our love of "real" rock and
roll, and stayed up as late as possible soaking it in. All that stuff
sounded better when it was dark anyways. I'm not saying I woulda never
found this music had my Grandpa not bought me that radio in my Playboy
haze, but I'll always feel that connection with him everytime it's late
at night and "Just My imagination" comes on.
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