22-28
A couple
of weeks ago I woke up realizing I was turning 49 in less than a month. No, I
am not worried about getting older, I was pumped because I was turning 49 and
how cool it was to be a prime number. Oops, about three seconds later I
realized that 49 is not a prime number and that neat phenomena wasn’t going to
happen until I turn 53. However, the fact that 49 can be divided equally into 7
equal parts of 7 led me to realize that, with some minor overlap, my life has
really worked well in the 7-year increments. So, to appease my own curiosity
and to cathartically get it out, I decided to write about each of my 7-year
segments leading up to turning 49.
“Home again” was a phrase that got used a lot during my earlier years. Now with a daughter who traveled with her horses and me who started racing hare scrambles later in life, that phrase has come around again. We just got home from the last FTR race for this season. The trailer is empty, the bike is clean, and so is the nasty gear. Dinner has been prepared so now it is time to recount another seven years. Tonight, I jump into seven years that led to changes that are still in effect with my life these days.
Another amazing thing that happened in that year was my dad’s 50th birthday party. You see, he was turning 50 and we were having a huge bash for him. That led me to want to get him a really cool gift. Ironically, little Babson Park had an antique store owned by Erin McCallister and managed by her young granddaughter, Michelle Welch. As I perused the Knotty Boys collection I just had to ask, “Hey you want to go out some time?” Her response would put me on pins and needles for months to come. “Well, I’m only 17 so let me ask my mom and dad.” What, at this point I was 26 and I am infatuated with a 17-year-old. I advised her not to worry about it, but I would love to take her out once she turned 18. Well, one thing led to another and finally in September we went on that first date. On the third date, the same night as the party, I asked her a question, well maybe made a statement, that changed both our courses. We stole away a couple of moments and I looked her in the eyes and said, “I don’t want to play any games, if you want to date me, then I’m in.” I am probably adlibbing that a bit, but the point was, this kid, who was way more mature than me and the eight years I had on her, was forced to make a life altering decision. She should have been having the time of her life in college far away from home but instead I was asking her to become my girlfriend.
Amazingly, her parents accepted me, my advanced age, and my lack of direction the best way parents can when their only child brings home a scruffy puppy. We dated, I still floated about the career/job spectrum and the dating turned into real love. Her dad, seeing the relationship put down some roots, helped me gain some direction. One evening he told me that if I was going to be able to take care of his daughter the way that she deserved, I should probably get started on a career. It is weird how things happen. I was working at Webber but at the end of the semester a lot of my jobs were removed, repositioned, or simply taken away. Ouch to the pocketbook. Enter the wonderful world of GEICO. It was a great job, I did not hate it, it was real with potential, but I did hate the constraints. However, it allowed me to prove that I was willing to be serious because, sometimes a bit of sacrifice is worth it when you really want something so precious. Oh yeah, of course there were jokes, snide comments, and sneers that I was dating someone so young. It is funny, we really do not get those now, 21 years later.
With
a new relationship, a new career, and really no idea what I wanted to do,
Michelle and I dated like couples do.
She was going to college and working at the courthouse and I was working
at GEICO. She would sneak over to my
office to eat lunch with me, or I would sneak over to USF/Lakeland to have a
car picnic with her. To this day, we
still have some of our best conversations while eating a meal in our “car picnics”. I took her to her first NASCAR race,
sportscar race, and her family took me to my first ever World Series game. We had holidays together, meals together, and
by ’99 kind of thought that this might be it for each of us. With the help of my mom, I chose the best ring
I could get, got the gumption up to ask her dad for his 19-year-old, most
important thing in the world to him, only daughter’s hand in marriage. He had some really strict rules, that to this
day I have honored and will continue to honor, and most importantly, he gave me
permission. On December 19, 1999 I took Michelle
over to their family’s lake house, got down on one knee at the front porch, and
asked her to marry me. I actually did
not hear her answer because an airboat went by right after I asked.



Well I must say I am enjoying each and every one of your seven year increment stories. I do learn a couple new things each time, but boy the memories you are telling are so awesome! Can not wait for the next group. GREAT JOB!!
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