Lanky, easygoing Louis used to say
when he and other college student
editors were on deadline,
pushing to get an old-fashioned
newspaper pasted up on poster-
board-sized pages that I would
eventually drive 33 miles down
the highway to the printer. Louis could
read the tension in the room that
we advisers didn’t always try to quell,
figuring that a little pressure might
help us all move more quickly.
Though it could also prompt small
eruptions between co-workers who,
we used to say, would not likely
have known each other if they hadn’t
come together to do this specific thing:
learn how to write, edit and produce
a student newspaper at the same time
they had to write, edit and produce
the paper every couple of weeks.
Now at another community college
five years after I retired from mine,
nearly 50 years after I hung up my
bells mallets, a week before the big
performance, shit’s gettin’ serious.
But I admire the way this young music
professor keeps the room calm,
rehearses her wind ensemble with
a light touch, though we all know
we’re far from perfect. I used to tell
my students that there’d never
been a perfect publication,
that there never would be, that we’d
do our best with the time we had,
each issue a kind of practice session,
that no one would die if it was less
than sterling. Which, oddly, calms me
as I move between bells and triangle,
xylophone and crash cymbals,
counting rests and entrances,
hoping to play most of the right
notes at the mostly the right time,
reminding myself how happy I am—
truly—to be here, making music
with others in a band once again.












