Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Dads on the Rail

Dads on the Rail

In countless rinks in northern climes we watch the games being played
Or the Zamboni circling round and round between
Gruff and anxious, pensive and expecting
We are the dads on the rail

You’ve seen us before, no matter the rink
Even at the early morning practices or mean-nothing scrimmages we’re there
Words barked to our players, car coaching even though we’ve been told not too
We are the dads on the rail

Sometimes we move around depending on the crowd
On the boards, under the scoreboard, or the top row of the stands we’ll be
Careful to watch our coffees sitting on the dasher so it doesn’t spill during a hard check
We are the dads on the rail

While moms, grandparents own the bleachers and mark territory with stadium blankets
Siblings with mouths stained slushy blue asking for one more quarter for a vending machine gumball
Volunteers working concessions selling the $4 hot dog, chips, and soda meal deal
We are the dads on the rail

Go get ‘em sport... Play Hard… Move your feet…Don’t forget what I told you…..
Phrases we command to our mites and squirts as they hop down out of the SUV’s
Runny nosed and laden with top dollar gear they drag bags and sticks into the rinks
We are the dads on the rail

And when the puck drops we see every mistake, missed pass, and bad call
We’ll tell the dads next to us that it wasn’t a trip; the kid stepped on his stick
Hey Ref you’re missing a good game! Hey coach my kid isn’t seeing enough ice time!
We are the dads on the rail

When the handshakes are exchanged and the Zamboni doors open we linger
From out of the locker room come our players, red faced and exerted, sometimes teary, sometimes not
And in those faces we again see a child, our child; the scoreboard reset to zeros
We are the dads on the rail

Can I hang out with Billy? Can we stay to watch the Bantam game? They plead
Can I have a box of popcorn? Are Grandma and Grandpa coming to lunch with us?
It’s hard to be hard, it’s good to exhale
We are the dads on the rail

The bags and sticks are loaded up and we’re on the way home
Quiet but not too quiet we ask questions about what coach said after the game
And in a few minutes we watch heavy eyes close in the rearview mirror
We are the dads on the rail

The time is fleeting and gear gets outgrown, a season ends
Hockey life fades, friends find other things to do, and suddenly we’re not as good as we thought we were
A new season starts, The Zamboni doors close and new players hit the ice
There are new dads on the rail

1 comment:

Baron said...

Nicely done.