Core Values

August 22, 2007

Roger in Korea brought up the interesting idea of posting a list of my core values. In other words what I believe, why I teach the way I do, my dedication to making music instruction accessible to everybody and stuff like that.

I already did that in A Book of Five Strings.

Why I Play The Banjo
From A Book of Five Strings ISBN 0974419028

I was just a teenager when I had my first epileptic seizure. I don’t remember the seizure itself. All I know is that I was eating French toast watching television one moment and the next thing I knew I was being rolled through a CAT scan. To say it was a terrifying experience would be understating it more than a little a bit.


It was almost a full day before anybody got around to telling me what was going on. I was sitting in a hospital bed hooked up to an IV when this doctor strolled in and informed me that I was an epileptic. I’ll never forget the disinterested way he said it. He could have just as easily been informing me that I had a soup stain on my tie.

He hung around long enough to knock off a list of things I was never going to be able to do. He also informed me that I was going to be on medication for the rest of my life. He was wrong on all counts. Then he wandered off before I could ask a single question.

I thought that there was somebody in the next bed, but the blinds were closed so I couldn’t see him. In fact, I didn’t even know for sure if anybody was over there until the doctor was leaving and I heard this guy on the other side of the curtain cursing. I was too confused to pay much attention.

I just sat there by myself for a while until my folks came in to see me. We didn’t talk about what was going on that much because we really didn’t know for sure what was happening. Dear Old Dad brought my banjo and stuck it in the corner but I wasn’t in the mood to play.

Later that day one of the priests from our parish came in to see me. He was just as distant and as preoccupied as the doctor had been. Somewhere in the middle of his spiel he blurted out that God was punishing me.

He never said what he thought I was being punished for because he never got the chance. The curtain around the next bed flew open and there was this really big guy cursing and screaming at the priest to get out.

I thought I was flipping out again. Between the shock over what the priest had said and the sight of that very angry, very big dude thrashing around all I could really do was just sit there and watch the show unfold.

The thing I’ll never forget about the big guy was his tattoos. Back in the early eighties you didn’t see too many people in my hometown with that much ink on their skin. His arms were covered with spider webs, flames and dancing skeletons in so many colors that my eyes had a hard time taking them all in. He was the living image of an outlaw biker from a B-movie.

So there I was with this goofy priest on one side and the illustrated man on the other side when I finally realized what the big guy was so upset about.

He yelled at the priest about my visit from the doctor and that I was just a kid and the last thing I needed to hear was any kind of guilt trip. He said a bunch of other stuff that really can’t be printed here, but he basically gave the good father the choice of leaving or getting his fanny kicked up between his shoulder blades. The priest did the smart thing and left.

After the big guy calmed down he said a few things about how much my current situation sucked but that it wasn’t my fault. Then he tossed me a pack of cigarettes and a couple of dirty magazines and went back to sleep.

I was still in a blue funk the next morning and through most of the day. The biker dude got sick of watching me sit there and mope so he tried to give me a pep talk, but I wasn’t buying it. I was pretty much convinced that my life was over.

Finally he told me to get out of bed and go do something. I asked him what exactly he had in mind (I’m editing the language here pretty heavily, folks) and he pointed to my banjo case and suggested that I go play a few songs.

Then he said something I’ll never forget. “Maybe that’s why your old man brought it here. Maybe he’s trying to tell you something.”

So I put on my robe and walked out into the hall carrying my banjo and dragging an IV stand.

I wound up spending the day going from room to room playing the handful of songs I knew. At first I felt like an idiot walking up to strangers in a hospital trying to play the banjo with a tube sticking out of my arm, but after the first couple of visits something started to happen.

People were welcoming me with open arms. It was like, “Hey! The banjo’s here!” and the patients that I visited fussed over me like a member of the family. I played the banjo and sang songs like “You Are My Sunshine”. After listening and signing along for a while they would start talking.

They talked about anything and everything you could imagine. What they were afraid of, what they were dealing with and what they had done right and done wrong. It hit me that the music (not just the banjo, but the act of making and sharing music) was creating some sort of a connection with the folks I was visiting. They saw the banjo and found an opportunity for something. It’s hard to say what that something was because it was different for everybody I met that day. Some of them made me laugh and some of them cried on my shoulder. A couple of times I had family members stop me on the way out the door for a hug. People kept thanking me like what I was doing was some kind of a big deal and it took me a little while to realize that, to them, it was a big deal.

Someone had simply cared enough to show up. Somebody had come along with a smile and a couple of old folk songs to let them know that they weren’t alone. I was reaching people. I was making a difference, however small, in the lives of the people I was meeting.

I was also finding out that I had something I could share. I wasn’t useless. I had this banjo and I could use it to brighten my corner of the world even if only for the space of a few tunes.

By the time I wandered back to my room I knew what I was going to do with my life.

4 Responses to “Core Values”

  1. madgeniusmusic Says:

    I like the new layout for the blog Patrick, cleaner and crisper somehow

    Danny

  2. Shaun Says:

    Patrick, your life stories(lessons) have inspire me to quit being a cynic and go out and find my own lessons(stories) of life. We all had bad times in our lives, you show us to look at it differently(correctly). You are always an inspiration.
    I have been “playing” the banjo for about two weeks as I can. I also use the harmonica fairly well(thanks grandpa).I played clarinet and saxaphone in school. You are now the only sensei I use. Thank you for using your valuable time to teach us via the internet. All wisdom you and DOD put out to us is a blessing and worth trying to live up to.
    By the way did you ever learn who that big guy with the tats is(was)?? Did ever talk to him again? Seems to me he was meant to be there at that exact time. Makes one think….

  3. Karl Pitwon Says:

    Hi Patrick
    I agree with Danny nice new layout . I have just finished reading your ‘ Why I play banjo’ story ……. absolutely fantastic….. one of lifes great lessons…….. I can see why you knew what you were going to do with your life, and you do it well Patrick

  4. Roger Says:

    Hey Patrick,

    Thanks for adding that permanent link, “Core Values” to your permanent links column at the top right of the blog.

    It would be nice, I think, if you opened that link for comments. Currently, it says, “Comments closed.”

    My guess is that if you open it for comments, you will accumulate a great collection of comments right there that will help to serve the purpose of that link.

    Peace and cheers,
    Roger

    PS. Still day dreaming about the chocolate Smith Island cake I’m missing.


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