Paola, Kansas, is a nano-town with 150 people and approximately 200 churches. This is the belly of the Bible Belt. Rumor has it that they handle snakes over in Parker. Although this is unconfirmed.
Sort of.
Right now I am in a building that was built in 1917. It was originally a convent school. Nuns once lived here. Today it’s a community center.
Currently I am standing on a stage performing my one-man trainwreck in the 34th State this evening. And I’m pretty emotional about it.
I’ve performed in 40 states, but this is the first time I’ve done my show in Kansas.
It’s weird being here. Namely, because my father was a Kansan. He was born in Iola. He grew up in Humboldt. He was “Kansas white trash” he always said. Kansas is where he began his life. And Kansas is where I started mine.
His funeral was held one county over.
My old man was an ironworker. They called guys like my father “boomers.” This meant he traveled wherever the work
was. We moved seven times in my first six years of life. We had no roots. No foundation.
For a time this was my home. I learned to play baseball in Kansas. I went to school here. I first couple-skated here. I first tried Red Man Chew on the back of daddy’s Ford, parked in Allen County, whereupon I puked for a solid hour.
My father lost his mind in Kansas. He was arrested in Leavenworth County, Kansas, for attempted murder of his wife and children.
The next morning, after being released on bail, he died by his own hand. The news of his self-inflicted death made the front page of the local papers.
We left Kansas when I was a child. I am not familiar with this land anymore. I don’t know it. My mother made me a Southerner. My aunts and uncles raised me. And…