County singer LeAnn Womack has a song lyric that goes, "I'm just tryin' to live so that when I die, the preacher won't have to lie." I won't mind if my friends and family lie a little--they can say I always looked thin and talk about how positively charming and hilarious they always found me to be, for example. (Those are words sure to reach me all the way in the hereafter.) I just hope that when the time comes, someone will do it, because it's important. It's important for those left behind, those too heartbroken to speak themselves but desperate for the comfort only memory can bring.
I recently lost a childhood friend who I loved very much. He had closer friends who'd spent more time with him in the years since our high school graduation. They no doubt knew him better than I, but I don't believe they loved him any better. When one of them asked if I would speak at his services, I was touched and honored. My friend had served as a pillar of support for me in our youth, asking virtually nothing in return. Remembering him (and subsequently his identical twin brother who he survived less than two years) for his friends and family at his funeral would be the only way I'd ever have to repay him that debt. I also knew that by speaking for our friend group, I would spare one of the others from feeling they had to. It isn't an easy thing to do by any means.
I didn't plan on publicly sharing the words I spoke that day in this forum, but today, October 30th, is Matthew and Andrew Ballard's birthday, and I wanted to share with our friends who didn't make it to Andy's services my remembrance of him...and his brother Matt.
Happy Birthday, Matt and Andy! It was a joy to know and love you. We miss you dearly!
When
Sarah first asked if I’d be willing to speak, while deeply honored, my first
thoughts were of how, among all of us that would gather today, surely there
would be so many more qualified—so many more that were closer to Andy over the
last few years, so many more that knew him even better than I. Looking out at
all of you now, I am happy that’s true. What a legacy—to have counted among
your closest friends and family so very many.
Today feels especially tough,
because while we gather here to say good-bye to Andy, in many ways it feels
like a final goodbye to Matt as well. As long as Andy remained here with us, a
part of Matt did, too. If we glanced at Andy from afar or as he darted in and
out of a room, it was possible to pretend, even if for only a second that he
was Matt, and wasn’t that something? That trick we still willed them to play on
us?
If loosing Matt was hard on us, it
was excruciating for his family…and unimaginable for Andy. We all knew his
bereavement would be different, that he would feel the loss of Matt more
deeply. How would he go from a lifetime of beginning sentences with “we” when
there was only him? He had never known an existence without Matt, and until
Matt’s passing, no one except for Mrs. Reatha for 60 seconds in 1977 ever knew
Matt without Andy.
On the last night I spent with Andy
and Matt together, the night of our 20th high school reunion, I
remember getting a kick out of them looking for one another between Sarah and
Patrick’s kitchen and back patio. “Twin, twin?” they would call and it was like
watching them at nine or ten versus almost 40.
I remember the day—the very moment
even—that I met Matt and Andy Ballard. While I had briefly attended Kitty Stone
Elementary, I left Jacksonville for a few years but returned in October of our
7th grade year. And there I was, in Texann Dixon’s 7th
grade homeroom, delivered at last from the wilderness of Ohatchee, back to
civilization within the City of Jacksonville. The tardy bell had rung a good
twenty minutes earlier, when Matt and Andy virtually burst through the door.
“Sorry we’re late,” Andy said. “Some cows got out and we had to catch them,”
Matt added. Mrs. Dixon sighed as she noted her attendance record. They didn’t
look like cattle wrustlers, they looked like city boys except for the fact that
Matt was slightly muddy. We weren’t driving yet, so I believed their
explanation to be true: it was a random Tuesday before 8:30 a.m. and there were
cattle to be wrangled in Jacksonville by a couple of identical 13 year-olds. Years
later, when we were however old enough to drive, the Ballards would be a factor
in almost every single one of my “tardies”, and there wouldn’t be a single cow
story to offer up as explanation…or another teacher as forgiving as Mrs. Dixon.
The boys entered my life in a mini-explosion of excitement, chaos, and
adventure…and that was what it was like to be in their presence forevermore: to
never know exactly what might happen because anything seemed entirely possible.
For much of our teenage years, I
believe Matt mostly tolerated me. I was Andy’s friend, a tagalong. Matt and I grunted
at each other when he’d answer the front door and find me standing there
looking for his brother. Sometimes jokes would be exchanged. “Sasquatch,” he
would offer. “Bilbo,” I would counter. That changed when we became parents and
our boys ended up on the same little league soccer team. Andy was in the
Carolinas and Matt and I spent evenings at the practice fields catching up,
talking about our sons, and laughing about old times. Those were the days
before pervasive social media, when being with Matt was really the only thing
that made Andy feel less far away.
I’ve wondered countless times over
the past several days if Andy ever truly realized the importance our friendship
held for me. Leaving Sarah’s sometime around 3 a.m. after our 20th
reunion, another classmate and I had a conversation on the ride home, deep and
uninhibited the way only 3 a.m. conversations can be, about the way our high school
relationships and friendships had ultimately shaped us, for better or worse, as
individuals. I know that I never made the kind of indelible mark on Andy’s life
that he made on mine. Andy never NEEDED me. Not like I had needed him, anyway.
When thinking about what I would say here today, I revisited my senior memory
book, looking for the words I knew Andy would have left among its pages, hoping
to find the classic “thanks for being a good friend” inscription or some
variation. Not a single word of what he wrote to me back then is appropriate to
share here. Not a word. I take some small comfort in knowing that I at least
entertained him, but he did so much more for me.
I spent most of my high school
years under the guardianship of my depression era grandmother. She was loving,
but tough. Her family had survived some of the harshest years in American
history and she never got over it. It was completely reasonable in her mind
that I should make due with a single pair of “long pants” during cold months
and a single pair of “short pants” during the 8 months known as Alabama Summer.
This was how Andy came to clothe me for most of our eleventh grade year. It was
the 90’s after all—I fit right in wearing his Gap jeans and t-shirts. In one of
my favorite pictures of the two of us, I’m even wearing one of his button down
shirts. I can’t tell you how many times he called me up before a basketball
game or other event to ask, “Where are my jeans? And no, not those, those are
Matt’s.” (Maybe that’s why he was grunting at me all the time?)
When I needed a job that same year,
Andy helped me get hired at Gregerson’s in Anniston where he’d swooped in as a
seventeen-year-old to take over their seafood department. He had middle-aged men
and women who’d worked in the grocery industry for years deferring to him, and he
carried himself like this was absolutely the norm. He was confident and
self-possessed in a way that I’m not even sure I am today. At Gregerson’s Andy
taught me that with determination, the right plan, and hard work anything was
possible no matter our youth. There was a wider world waiting on us outside of
high school, he’d tell me. As long as I was taking steps toward my place in
that world, I was going to be okay. He was probably the most reliable and
responsible teenager I ever knew.
Andy also shaped me as a thinker
and activist. In part, because of him I will always stand up for a person’s
equality and their right to protection under the law, no matter who they
love—even if who they love is Nick Saban...I know, he was so weird.
I wondered who an old Andy would be
without Matt, and the truth is I was never able to wrap my mind around the
thought of it. I would have liked to have known them both with white beards and
eyes that still twinkled when they smiled and laughed, but there is nothing
sadder on this earth, at least not that I’ve encountered, as a twinless twin.
There’s no doubt that we will miss them forever, but we can take comfort in the
knowledge that Matt and Andy are together again. I hope that we leave here
today more committed than ever to our friendships and that we do so in memory
of Matt and Andy Ballard, the best friends many of us will have ever had.
Thank you.