This entry is from a short story I wrote a few months back titled "Last one out, bring the flag" in two parts. It tells of how a kid learned about racism and how to cope as best as he could in the turbulent late 60's.
Towards the end of my teacher’s pet days and before I was asked to 
take ten steps backwards (poem reciting) in my still developing manhood,
 I’d ask Mrs. Gladfelter to drop me at the curb close to my house so I didn’t have 
to explain myself to anyone, specifically my Mom. My mom was militant 
before I knew what the word meant. It didn’t cotton well with her to 
know I might be getting beat up or fighting every day. I’d flat out lie 
to her and say we played rough at recess, and that much was true, but 
coming out on the short end of a two and sometimes three on one scrap 
would mean my mom would show up and the Yankee in her (she was from 
Maryland, born this side of the Mason-Dixon in a small railroad town 
named Cumberland, but I called her a Yankee anyway just to piss her off)
 would reveal itself in all its Gray and White Union colored glory. It 
would be like the Civil War was being fought all over again and 
something I’d just soon avoid back then. God help you if your Mom ever 
showed up at school to defend your honor. It meant one thing and one thing only, 
you were a dead man. I was convinced my mom didn’t give a rat’s ass 
about me back then, but you were not going to beat up her kid. It was 
more of a personal pride thing for her, not a love your son thing as far
 as I could tell. If she knew what I was going through and not winning 
100% of the time, I was a dead man. If she showed up at my school and 
raised all manner of hell because I was getting the shit kicked out of 
myself a few days out of the week, then the terrorists I attended school
 with would kill me dead. I figured that out after the next to the last 
white kid’s mother did just what I feared mine might. My buddy Pat 
McGill was a scrappy red-headed kid (aren’t all of them?) of Irish 
descent who lasted about two more weeks and those two weeks were filled 
with face down, dirt-sniffing, torn clothed ass-whuppins from the new 
locals. His family moved away shortly thereafter, leaving the duty of 
flag bearer to just me. Years later Pat and I attended the same high 
school, as fate would have it, but by then we were both just distant 
memories remembered by an occasional “What’s up” in the hallways of 
higher learning. Maybe we just both wanted to forget what we’d been 
through and seeing each other brought back those memories, unpleasant 
for us both.
Life’s like that.
I feel like I need to make one thing clear here. I was not a whiner 
or a pussy back then. The first term, whiner, was just that, someone who
 complained about every little thing that went wrong. The second term, 
pussy, might mean a lot of different things to many, from a critter of the feline persuasion to 
woman parts. What it meant to an athlete was you were unable, unfit,
 and worst of all, unwilling. It also meant you pissed sitting down, played with Barbie Dolls (as 
opposed to “action figures” like G.I. Joe) wore dresses, anything that 
might mean you weren’t a man or at least well on your way there as far 
as athletics were concerned. Back then I played every intermural sport, save for 
basketball, that a kid could play. I would not ever be known as a pussy as 
long as I lived, so I learned one inalienable truth; I was going to have
 to fight for the rest of my life if the fifth grade was a window into 
my future. “It’s going to be alright” meant that I’d better learn to 
fight, like it, and somehow balance the victories and the defeats so I 
could survive. I learned one thing in the fifth grade, and that was that
 for every kids ass you kicked, there was an older brother, a cousin, a 
second cousin and sometimes even a sister whose ass you’d have to fight 
after your pugilistic dismissal of their “kin”. I needed to 
win if I wanted to eat my lunch that day.
My daily activities did force me to learn how to dance back then. It made me 
take full advantage of the one fiftieth Cherokee Indian it was rumored I
 possessed; it made me do the rain dance. And pray too. I'd dance and pray for rain, and do both a lot. But I also learned 
I didn’t want to fight during recess and have to fight my way home to 
boot. So when I’d get in a fight, I’d make sure I knew who and how many 
family members I was going to engage afterward. It was a balancing act 
most nine-year olds might never consider. At one point it got so bad and
 frequent, I wore the same pants to school for three weeks straight 
because I had fought Dexter Washington, his six brothers, four cousins, 
his sister (twice) and Dexter one more time, and getting my clothes torn
 up would set off warning shots with my mother. I think I have 
adequately explained the slings and arrows of that scenario, so I 
avoided it like a potential life-ending plague.
I remember those green “Docker” style pants well. They were 
hand-me-downs from my older brother, who I guessed was fighting his own 
wars in Junior High (aka middle school), and they got a year’s worth of 
wear in the three weeks I donned them to do battle. It ended when the 
principal of my school called me into his office and asked me if my 
family was in some sort of financial straits. I told him that I was not 
aware of any hardships that had befallen my clan and my clothing was not
 a reflection of those unknown straits, if they indeed existed. Mr. 
Saffo was a man of action, and any trouble would be dealt with by a 
principal with a no-nonsense approach to young people. What that meant 
in English (based on my now innate sense of survival) was that if he 
stepped in I’d be fighting on my way to school, from school, during 
school, and possible week-ends… and maybe Christmas and Easter too. That
 was a prospect I’d just as soon avoid. So I lied to my principal that 
day, in my ragged green slacks and ragged mind-set. I lied to him so I might survive,  not just that day, but the many days that lay ahead.
Around then, I was already fighting my way through the Jackson 
family. The Jacksons were a huge family big enough to field a football 
team (both offense and defense), a basketball team and a baseball team 
to include a bull pen and farm league. There was what seemed to me, to 
be a few hundred Jacksons. Their mom and dad named them all after the 
books of the bible. I am not kidding when I tell you this. I fought 
Genesis Jackson, Exodus Jackson, Leviticus Jackson (now he could scrap) 
all the way to Malachi Jackson. I skipped a few books, but did duke it 
out with both first and second Samuel (known as the twins), Isaiah, 
Ezekiel, Nehemiah and even Ruth and Esther Jackson. I had punched my way
 through the Book of Moses, The Prophets, most of The Writings. I 
guessed names like “Lamentations, Kings, Numbers and Deuteronomy” were 
just way too strange to name a kid, Biblical or not. What I didn’t know 
was those were used as middle names for other Jacksons, like Bubba, 
Leroy, and Skillet Jackson, one mean SOB.
I was busy fighting my way through the New Testament and had the shit
 kicked out of me by Luke Jackson, a dude who was a foot taller than me 
at the time and the first Jackson to have pity on a neophyte scrappy 
white kid born on Peachtree street. I had whipped Matthew, Mark and John
 Jackson, even-steven with “Jesus” Jackson, who hollered for me not to 
punch him in the face (and for some strange reason I didn’t) because, as
 he said “I am the chosen one, mutha fukka”. I was working my way into 
Acts Jackson (his family called him “Action”), when it all stopped 
suddenly with the Jackson clan. I was ready to fight it out now and 
explain my blasphemous altercations with the biblical books expressed in
 human form, to God himself if necessary, but later.
I would soon learn why the fights all stopped, and that right soon.
It seemed that the Jackson family was regular attendees of the 
Baptist Church in the burg of Atlanta where they were all bussed from. 
The political lottery deciding that all the Jackson family between the 
Seventh grade and Kindergarten would receive the earliest part of their 
education at the same school I was required to attend. It seemed like 
the lottery favored some and not others, if you saw things from my point
 of view. My brother was in Junior High School, smart as Hell and a 
decent opponent when it came to fighting. He was 457-0, kicking my 
younger ass every single time I stepped up to the plate to take his 
crown. It would be many years later before I took his title away and he 
and I became more like friends than siblings afterward. I guess you get 
used to your bigger brother watching your back when you are physically 
smaller than him, meaning you had something with which to threaten a 
larger threat with. The first time I bested my older brother, and the 
last time I tried, my thin layer of protection vanished like a fart in a
 hurricane.
The Jacksons, it seemed, had “testify day” at the Baptist Church a 
few Sundays back, where they all were supposed to confess their sins in 
front of the church. As fate or God would have it, my name came up 
during said confession from one of the kinder (I’m guessing Hebrews 
Jackson or maybe 2nd Timothy…he was a bit of a sissy and his turn was 
coming soon) more gentle books of the Jackson Bible. In other words, one
 of the family members confessed that I had to fight the majority of the
 family and by no fault of my own. It seemed that the heads of the 
Jackson family (it was an even proposition in the black family… Mom had 
as much sway over the family as the father did) made sure that it was 
known that continuous willful sin would place them in the hot-seat of 
Hades faster than rejecting Jesus as Lord and Savior (and not Jesus 
Jackson either-the real sho-nuff Jesus of Nazareth, Son of the most 
high). That’s the same Jesus whom I was now proclaiming as my personal 
savior.  Although the source of my thankfulness was a by-product of the 
Jackson family’s public confessional, the best part of that Sunday was 
the cessation of getting my ass kicked in by the biggest family in 
Atlanta. It did not, however, compel them to take that one extra step in
 their still evolving faith walk. That extra step would be protecting or
 even praying for their enemy. In other words, none of the biblical 
Jacksons I had locked horns with ever stepped in to halt any other 
scraps I was involved in. That was how I saw myself back then. I was the
 enemy and I didn’t even know for sure why. I guess any battle that gets
 fought too long ends up that way. Nobody remembers why it started or 
how it will end. It even took me a while to figure it out. Mine ended 
six months later with a large yellow moving van backed into my yard.
It was many years later when I discovered what “Last one out, bring the flag” really meant.
I guess I was that “one”.
 
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