Unheralded

TONY J BENDER: That’s Life — Big John

Jimmy Dean didn’t write that song about Big John Schlosser. But he should have. And they don’t erect many statues to folks in small towns. But they should. It would take a lot of bronze because John was big.

That’s the thing about small towns, they grow bigger-than-life characters like John. Maybe it’s the air, the soil, the sky … maybe it’s the elbow room that allows a man to stretch out without bumping into something. Maybe the easy pace has something to do with it. All I know is Big John will be remembered for as long as things are worth remembering.

I can see him now sitting on a bar stool at the Ponderosa Bar in Frederick, S.D., population, just enough. Not that John was a bar fly. He wasn’t. But the Ponderosa was like Frederick Day Care. I played pool there as a fourth-grader. For 50 cents, you could stuff the pockets with bar rags and play all day. The Ponderosa’s gone, too.

I remember him on that stool at the end of the bar right next to the jukebox. Maybe it was 20 years ago. Maybe 25. Why do I hold that particular vision to the fore? There are others to be sure, but I wonder if our eyes are wiser than we are, cataloging people and things we must remember. Things that we don’t realize at the time are fleeting.

Memories are a garden always in bloom.

He had a head the size of a watermelon, long hair, but not hippie hair. Just hair that was always in need of a haircut, and later on, thinning on the top. Maybe 6-3, but he looked taller, and thick with a chest barrels would envy. Imagine Jerry Garcia, only bigger, and with his fingers intact.

He had this way of looking at you over his glasses, which insisted on slipping down his nose like a kid on a playground slide. I thought about that look when I got the news today — the look of a mischievous professor with a beloved pupil. Not love, though. Jesus to God, no, we were men and men don’t love, they like. Like.

Anyway, as I sort through it now, I guess what it was, was that John made you feel welcome, that he was glad to see you. And he genuinely was. And if you were his friend, and lots of us were, you got that look.

He was smart. Read science magazines. Thought about things. A philosopher of sorts.

When I’d come back for a visit from more exotic places than Frederick, sometimes arriving in the wee hours of the morning, I’d stop at John’s place before I went home. I realize now it was because he was a touchstone. Things changed, people came and went, but John was the constant.

He was usually awake, and if he wasn’t, he’d stir, put on some music and light up a left-handed cigarette. Now, I know his brother, Gare Bare, is going to cringe at this part, but it was no secret. Anyway, it will be legal everywhere soon. John was just ahead of his time.

We gathered not quite a year and a half ago for John’s birthday, but mostly to say goodbye. As I greeted disparate but familiar faces from the past, I didn’t realize then that John was a hub connecting spokes that reached out into a wheel spinning like the Earth in his orbit. We were all connected to one good man.

So what made John worthy of songs and statues? He didn’t cure cancer. Didn’t write the great American novel. Didn’t climb Everest. Didn’t pull children from a burning building. But he would have. No, John was a great friend, and the farther you get down this trail, the more you understand how precious that is.

They don’t build statues in the public square to friends. But they should. It’s OK, we’ll craft monuments in our minds. Mine will be leaning toward me, twinkling eyes peering at me over his glasses, hair askew. And my statue speaks: “Bones!” As if my sobriquet were a celebration.

I loved Big John. Loved.

A while after I’d called my Mom to tell her the news, I walked out into the rain to roll up my car window in a downpour. I think the sky was crying.

© Tony Bender, 2018




10 thoughts on “TONY J BENDER: That’s Life — Big John”

  • Linda Siro June 24, 2018 at 8:08 pm

    This article of Big John was a very touching story! Thank you for sharing.RIP Big John.

    Reply
  • Randy Crawford June 24, 2018 at 8:28 pm

    Great tribute to John, thanks Tony, I guess we all did lose a good friend today.

    Reply
  • Kelly June 25, 2018 at 9:44 am

    RIP John, you’ll be missed! Great tribute Tony!

    Reply
  • Donna Schlosser Underberg June 25, 2018 at 7:13 pm

    Thanks for writing this Tony. I wouldn’t have known John had passed if it wasn’t for the tribute you wrote.

    Reply
  • Ron June 25, 2018 at 9:23 pm

    you’ll be remembered

    Reply
  • Rochelle Fiekens June 25, 2018 at 9:51 pm

    Wonderful tribute to Big John. Tony you’re the best at what you do! So happy to know you.

    Reply
  • Karen June 26, 2018 at 5:38 pm

    Tony, this is spot on. John was very lucky to have you as a friend and to have lived in a small town. I remember him looking through his huge telescope and going on and on about the planets. He was full of knowledge about a lot of things.

    Reply
  • Wayne Kayl July 1, 2018 at 10:44 am

    I don’t know if anyone else saw John’s tornado pictures. I took a video of him explaining the photos. Here is John in his own words. https://youtu.be/WlSWVgyKdL8

    Reply
  • Nancy Boatman July 2, 2018 at 4:38 pm

    My heart is broken for you. I may have never met John face to face but I had spoken to him many of times through internet. He was a wonderful man full of laughter. My heart will forever keep a piece of him within . May God be with you and follow you through your hardship . Peace and love .Fly high big John ..your duty is done…

    Reply
  • Palmer Taskerud August 6, 2018 at 11:52 pm

    Thanks Tony. A perfect tribute to a larger than life guy.

    Reply

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