'cause I'm cryin' for you, dear
You are on my lonely mind. "
Hank Williams
I hopped up on the barstool next to my friend who had arrived
just before me at our regular hang-out. Before
my butt hit the vinyl covered cushion, my Miller High Life was being placed in
front of me on the bar. It was that kind of place. They knew your beer and
watched the door to see who was coming in so they could grab it from the icy
cold cooler and serve it before you had a chance to ask. There was no need for questions about how you
would pay. If you had been there before you were automatically added to a
little recipe file box of index cards. Each card had someone’s name written on
it. And each card had a series of hash-marks which kept track of how many beers
you had drank. When you paid, which was whenever you happened to have some
funds available, they simply scratched through the corresponding hash-marks
with the number of beers you paid for.
All beers were one dollar, so no need
for pulling out a calculator.
I grabbed the salt shaker from the counter and salted the
rim of my bottle, took a swig, and turned to my friend. “I found the perfect job for me in the paper
today!” I exclaimed. He half-laughed and smiled as he retorted, “What? They are
looking for someone to sit on a barstool, drink beer, and philosophize?” Hahaha.
This quick answer had me laughing already. It’s why I came here to this
little pub named The Par 4. It was a
place to laugh. It was a place for the
broken-hearted to come and have fun. A place to be yourself. If laughter and camaraderie
have healing powers, then this was a place to fix your broken heart.
Joe |
My own broken heart had lead me here. After a break-up of a three-year long relationship
I had nowhere to spend my weekend nights.
My ex-girlfriend and I had hung out with other couples and spending time with
a bunch of lovebirds was the last thing I wanted to do. I was living with my parents as I was trying
to wrap up college. We lived on a lake
surrounded by farm land and dotted with small towns. There were only three bars in the area. The
Par 4 seemed like an unlikely place for me to go, but I was desperate to have
company. I walked in to the dimly lit
pub which had previously been a Pure Oil gas station and service bay. Jimmy was bartending that first night. His
step-father and mother owned the joint. He was the only person in the place and
obviously hungry for company as well.
As I drank my first cold brew, Jimmy told me about his
recent break-up with his fiancé. She was also the mother of his son. Jimmy was the same age as me. I told him
about the fresh heartache I had suffered and we were fast friends. The next beer was on him. And the next. Jimmy
needed to talk and I had nothing else to do so that made me a good
listener. I needed to talk and Jimmy was
stuck behind the bar I sat at, so he was a good listener too. We came from
different worlds. I was a wannabe hippie that went to college and Jimmy was
already a Dad and working to support himself. But that did not matter, because
heartbreak does not discriminate.
The bar was uniquely situated just inside the local college
town. A prestigious college well known for high academic standards. Just on the
other side of the town line was another town.
These communities sat side by side for hundreds of years and were polar
opposites in most every way. The other
town was a mill town. Old textile factories or whatever manufacturing
had moved into those factories employed everyone who lived there. They were
working people. They ran machines, worked odd shifts, and drove forklifts. They came to The Par 4 after long hours of
standing on their feet or moving heavy objects onto trucks. They came to sit,
relax, and laugh with friends. I don’t
remember any of the Managers from these plants frequenting the establishment.
Nor did the professors from the college. But the Professor’s kids that were my
age were regulars. The occasional group
of students would nervously come in, but I’m not sure that they had a full
appreciation for the beauty of this dive.
No doubt, it was a dive. Concrete floors, the old car lifts buried
beneath the them. The barstool's rips were repaired with black electrical
tape. There were pickled eggs, Penrose
sausages, and Sardines on the menu. Well, there wasn’t a menu, but the delicacies
were prominently displayed on the shelf behind the bar. Oh, and they had pickled pig’s feet as well.
Me (wannabe hippie) John (intellectual who hunted and split wood) |
I made new friends. Good people. Some that I had gone to high school with who
were wrapping up their higher education as well. Some of my new friends were twenty years older
and looked thirty years older. Factory work ages you. Some were extreme
intellectuals who grew up hunting and splitting wood. A few were former city
people, like myself, who had moved to the lake after the interstate was
completed. I even made my first friend from across the pond. My very proper British friend came here
because it reminded him of pubs back home.
But we all had a few things in common; we liked to drink beer, we liked
to laugh, we craved company. No matter which town you came from we all liked to
discuss deep matters on occasion.
Slab (RIP David Stinson) |
Slab was completely unaware of the concept of political correctness. When he used offensive words I was comfortable enough to engage him in a conversation about why I thought that particular word was offensive. He always listened politely and seemed to consider my opinion. I doubt it had much lasting impact, but that was the kind of place this was. He could say it and I could raise my objection, but we understood that we were different individuals and our own circumstances had brought us to this point. There was no need to judge.
The first time I brought my future wife to the place, I had warned her in advance about the potential for something offensive to be said. We sat at the bar and I introduced her to Slabbie. He served our beers and looked quizzically at my date, who resembled the cover photo of Anne Frank that we are all familiar with. I could tell that Slab sensed that there was something different about her. I was getting worried. Was Slab anti-Semitic?
Clearly puzzled he bluntly asked, “What are you? An Injun?”
Oh, man!
I burst out laughing. My future wife looked at me with wide eyes, smiling. “What?”
she asked. I knew this was a case where an interpreter was needed. I said, “Slab thinks that you are a Native
American.” She laughed. Slab was still looking for an answer. He seemed unable to put his finger on what
was ethnically different about my girlfriend. In those towns you were either of
Scots-Irish descent or African-American. I explained that she was Jewish with
Eastern European ancestry. He seemed
satisfied and returned to drinking from his paper cup.
By the end of that evening he had drunk so
many little paper cups that he eventually was standing on one of the swiveling
barstools, doing the twist to the song blaring from the juke box:
"Here she comes now sayin' Mony Mony"
Some nut
suggested that Slab “take it off, take it all off” and he obliged by dropping
his pants! After witnessing the largest
pair of Fruit of the Looms we had ever seen, my date and I made a quick exit
out the backdoor, practically falling on one another.
Laughing out loud.
Not every night at the Par was fun and games. Whenever humans gather there is bound to be
tension. Especially when alcohol is involved. There were fights, that typically
ended with men hugging and saying how much they loved each other. There were
nights when a woman that was a former Austrian Nazi would get drunk and spew hateful and
racist words. There were nights when Margaret, the owner, would get so wasted
that she couldn’t walk or talk. Her son
Jimmy the bartender would ask me if I could take her home. I would drive her nearly passed out self to
their trailer on the lake where I would have to support her on the walk to the
door.
Jimmy would cross a few hash-marks
off my tab.
There were sad nights when I watched Elvie the waitress pour her tip earnings from the steakhouse into the poker machine. There were also nights when she would hit a jackpot and clap with excitement and then spend all her winnings buying beers for the whole place.
Elvie, Tommy, and The Poker Machine |
Driving drunk people home was a regular assignment for me. Johnny, the perpetually unemployed ex-owner
of The Par, was one of my regular riders.
He was strong and imposing.
Sometimes it was difficult to get him out of the car. Under the influence he would tell me how he
loved me like a son, only to barely remember my name the next time we saw each
other.
There were plenty of characters in this place and they kept me company
and kept me laughing as I transitioned into the next phase in my life.
The TV show Cheers featured a bar where “Everybody knows
your name.” It was posh in comparison to The Par 4. But it rang true for me
that there are times in our lives where we need a place like this. A place to
be with people, to laugh, and see that “our troubles are all the same.”