Dropping off YaYa at Camp K is always a memorable experience. Each year I try to capture the essence of this day on camera but simply cannot. I guess it’s just one of those you-had-to-be-there things.
When I finally pulled myself away, the first song on the radio said it all: Jayme Johnson’s “In Color.” I began reflecting on life’s critical events: marriage, children being born, first days of [school, camp, summer, etc], sporting events, family members dying..,and the aftermath of that.
I cried the whole way to work.
In Color
I said, Grandpa what’s this picture here
It’s all black and white and ain’t real clear
Is that you there, he said, yeah I was eleven
Times were tough back in thirty-five
That’s me and Uncle Joe just tryin’ to survive
A cotton farm in the Great Depression
And if it looks like we were scared to death
Like a couple of kids just trying to save each other
You should have seen it in color
This one here was taken overseas
In the middle of hell in nineteen forty-three
In the winter time you can almost see my breath
That was my tail gunner ole’ Johnny McGee
He was a high school teacher from New Orleans
And he had my back right through the day we left
And if it looks like we were scared to death
Like a couple of kids just trying to save each other
You should have seen it in color
A picture’s worth a thousand words
But you can’t see what those shades of gray keep covered
You should have seen it in color
This one is my favorite one
This is me and grandma in the summer sun
All dressed up the day we said our vows
You can’t tell it here but it was hot that June
That rose was red and her eyes were blue
And just look at that smile I was so proud
That’s the story of my life
Right there in black and white
And if it looks like we were scared to death
Like a couple of kids just trying to save each other
You should have seen it in color
A picture’s worth a thousand words
But you can’t see what those shades of gray keep covered
You should have seen it in color
You should have seen it in color
— Jayme Johnson, In Color
Kurt in Boston says
What a great song! There’s power in music, isn’t there?
Wes says
very potent… We have a way of doing what is necessary…