We bought a Roku for our TV. I’ll admit, until this morning I thought a Roku was a Japanese three-phrase poem that grade-school children were forced to write at gunpoint.
The Roku is actually a small device that plugs into your television and gives you TV service via the internet. A neighborhood kid named Tyler helped me hook it up because I am technologically challenged.
Tyler is not yet twelve, but he is your all-American preteen, which means he knows everything about technology and will likely be rich one day.
In no time, Tyler had it running and we were watching a spring training baseball game.
The Braves and the Rays were tied. Tyler and I watched in silence for a few minutes. Ronald Acuña Jr. hit a home run. People on TV cheered. I cheered.
Tyler looked like he didn’t understand what he was watching.
“How do you keep score in baseball?” Tyler finally asked.
And this broke my heart.
In my
childhood home, there was no clear division between baseball and the red letters in the Bible. We talked baseball on Sunday mornings, and we talked church during Saturday night ball games.
As fate would have it, there were two baseball gloves on my bookshelf. My wife keeps them around as decoration, to lend a masculine feel to our living room. Today, the mitts served another purpose.
The smallest of the two gloves was my old Little Leaguer. My father bought it for me when I was in second grade. I will never forget that day. Daddy took me into a store, we tried on gloves until we found the right one.
That night, my father showed me how to oil it with bacon grease.
“Grease it up good,” he told me. “And it’ll last for the rest of your life.”
To this day, I cannot smell…