An update on—and happy
birthday to -- Kid Billy
Pat Laster
On Tuesday, March 19, my grandson Kid
Billy a.k.a. Billy Joe Paulus, will turn the ripe old age of 23.
Gee-whiz, it seems like only yesterday he was 8 months old and asleep on a
woman’s shoulder in a foster home somewhere in rural Clark County--on a 72-hour
hold from Human Services.
Still asleep, he was moved from one shoulder to
another—mine—placed in a newly-purchased car seat and was driven to Benton in
Saline County. We were both unaware of what our future together would bring.
Seventy-two
hours? How about twenty-three years? His first six years were spent in Benton
on West Sevier—across the street from Our Lady of Fatima School. At only $135 a
month, the tuition was worth my walking him across the street to (the late) Mrs.
Debra Cloud’s classroom and back again after school. He loved Mrs. Debra.
In
September of 1997, after the beginning of Billy's first grade, I took a job in Arkadelphia.
Before I could secure a house there, I drove back and forth. The Fatima teacher
and principal wanted to medicate him for ADHD. I actually asked the teacher
(whose son I’d had problems with in middle school) if she wanted me to take him
out of school right then. She backed off and said no, so we were good for a
time.
I found the perfect house in Arkadelphia on North 15th Street with
great neighbor-landlords. They had a son a little older than Billy. And
cats.
Sure
enough, Dr. K. the pediatrician, watched Billy for 10 minutes and decided yes,
definitely ADHD. He prescribed Ritalin.
But that
was then and this is now. On the first day of March this year, I watched him
sing with both the Henderson Concert Choir and the Chamber Chorale. He stood
stock-still for long periods. His hands held the music folder up so that his
eyes could flit from score to director without obvious head movement. Focused?
Focused? I’d say so!
After
the concert, he introduced me to the friend who’d asked him to go in with some
others and rent a house in town for next term. I wrote out his part of a
down-payment (in addition to paying his on-campus apartment rent: what we do
for love) on the spot.
Thanks go to Dr. Jim Buckner, who five years ago,
offered KB, from Benton High School, a band scholarship to HSU. Thanks also to the
former choral director, Dr. Eaves, who accepted KB into the select choral
group, and to Dr. Ryan Fox, present director, for being a supportive friend and
excellent—no, superior--choral man. KB is one of only two or three non-music
majors in this group. Which makes Grandmother extremely proud.
Two trumpets lie somewhere in our residences unused.
I’ll offer one to another grandson who, besides being in a Conway middle school’s
orchestra this year (violin), wants to play also in the school band next year.
This “fifth child” of mine is why I don’t volunteer.
I think 23 years of raising a grandson should be considered my volunteer work.
As
well as my passion. Happy birthday, son. #
1 comment:
Well written, Pat. And a job well done!
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