A Ninth-Grade Dance to Forget -- If Only I Could
This tale of woe takes place in the
ninth grade, back when ninth graders still stayed in junior high.
I had detention. I don’t remember
why. But so did the prettiest girl in the class, whom I’ll call
Rhonda—because that was her name.
The catch was, she was dating Benny,
the captain of the football team. But, at detention, I learned
there was trouble in paradise. Oh yes. They had broken
up, with just four days to go before the big ninth grade dance.
Tragic!
We had a fine chat when I walked her
home, so when I got home, I decided, what the heck. I called her
up to ask her to the dance. Sure, she said, why not.
Simple stuff!
Of course, I was level-jumping, and
I knew it. So I had to avoid her the entire week, to make sure
she didn’t back out. Because her locker was near the bathroom,
that meant I couldn’t go to the bathroom at school all week.
Couldn’t risk it.
And, as luck would have it, my mustache
was finally coming in that very week, so after four days of rubbing
my fingers over my lip, I had two mustaches: one made of wispy blond
hair, the other of acne. Awesome.
Dragging that blade over my lip for
my shaving experience was fantastic. Man that felt great!
Being only 14, my dad had to drive
me to her house, and this is where things got tricky. Her father
happened to be the head coach of the Huron high school hockey team.
My entire life, I dreamed of not of winning Nobel Prizes or even playing
for the Red Wings or even Michigan, but suiting up for the River Rats
of Huron High.
So, when I got there, I had to be
cool around Rhonda – wearing a beautiful spaghetti strap purple dress
I remember to this day – tough around her dad, but sweet around her
mom. After we took some pictures by the fireplace, I figured
I’d pulled the whole thing off – until we get to the gym.
I made sure we showed up about 20
minutes late, so all my friends – and especially my enemies – could
see me walk in with the prettiest girl in school.
Well, it worked – maybe too well.
My former best friend yells, from
the back of the gym, with 300 people I’ve known my entire life between
us: “Hey Bake! Look at your coat!”
I look down, and I see a sight I will
also never forget: There are only two buttons on a sport coat, and I’ve
got them mixed up. The coat is a mess – with everything tilted
to the side, as if I’m on a skateboard flying by.
My brain goes into full panic mode
– Reee! Reee! Reee! Overload! Overload!
Can’t function! Can’t function! To this day I don’t
know if I put my right foot down and kept walking, or even if I could
have.
The rest of the night, I was a shell
of my former self. But I was young, and after school got out,
I recovered, finding solace by playing baseball and hanging out with
my friends.
Until, that is, I got a little envelope
from a strange address. I open it up. In it is a sweet note
from Rhonda’s mom. And – what’s this? -- a photo, of us
standing together, next to their fireplace – with my coat buttoned
wrong!
And that’s when that tender wound
that had just started to heal tore clean open.
Oh, and her father left Huron to start
coaching one of the Red Wings’ minor league teams that fall.
Lot of good all that did me.
So, boys, this prom season, be sure
to double-check your coat to make sure you buttoned it properly.
Girls, be sure double-check your date’s coat to make sure he buttoned
it properly. And moms, if your daughter’s date didn’t button
his coat properly – don’t send him photos.
But don’t worry, boys. Even
if you do screw it up, you’ll get over it—after years of therapy
and light medication. You’ll be fine. Trust me.
Copyright© 2011, Michigan Radio Follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/johnubacon


Bake, you're the man....I could feel that feeling in my stomach as you re-lived that story....so good!
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Is this the famous Crawdaddy, resurfacing?
Great thanks, Fred. Schadenfreude is a wonderful thing!
Glad I've healed enough to tell the tale. Cathartic, therapeutic, and all that!
-JUB
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So stinkin cute, I love it. Thank you for sharing!
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Oh my Lord John U, its a wonder you can even function to this day! My 9th grade story takes me back to Marshall Jr. High in Westland. Back in the fall of 1974, Lloyd Carr was coaching at John Glenn H.S. and most of the students from Marshall attended John Glenn. However that year, the boundaries were moved 2 blocks and I was going to attend the cross-town rival. Wayne Memorial.
After Carr witnessed me kicking a 37 yard field goal, he remarked that I should make sure to come out for the Rocket football squad. When my coach informed Lloyd that because of the boundary change I would be attending Wayne Memorial, Carr looked directly at me and exclaimed with a huge grin on his face, "Break a leg kid, break a leg." When Jeff DeFran reminded Lloyd of this story a few days ago, he could only respond by saying, "And I meant it!" The sting of humiliation lingers after 37 years.
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Thanks for the laughs John, and Thank God,us Men in Uniform have gig lines and extra buttons!
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Hey Bake, its your goddaughter. Great story! Post the picture! JDP
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Ah, the Mighty Miss Jane!
Holy mackeral, you're old enough to understand the trauma of that one.
Not sure I have that photo. My mom might. I'm certain HER mom does!
But any copies should be stored in a concrete bunker along with the spent rods from the Chernobyl disaster, and never exhumed. (Look those words up, Missy!)
I will, however, visit your class! Still trying to finish this %$#%& book! Always something else that needs to be done.
See you soon!
-JUB
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I love it! We all have a few of those stories hidden deep in the confines of our closet. You are a better and braver man than me for sharing that and I second your Goddaughter's request...Post the picture!
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You forgot to mention that you have not had to shaved since that day!
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All true, Rhino. I learned that, if I just quit rubbing the damn thing, the acne won't come back, and no one can see the wispy blond hair anyway.
All set!
-JUB
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Ah, the perils and pleasures of adolescence. Not sure I remember many pleasures
Good story. Do you have sons? Make sure they see it when they are 14.
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