My plane touched down in Missouri. The air was cool and sharp. The horizon was broomstick flat. It looked like rain.
In a few moments I was in a cheap rental car that smelled like an armpit. I cruised along the featureless byways of the “Show-Me State.” The state where I was born. The state where my father ended his own life.
I entered Parkville. The town where our lives went to perdition. And I remembered things.
My father used to tell a story about why Missouri is called the Show-Me State. When I was a kid, we’d ride in his rusted Ford F-100. Daddy would be eating licorice or sunflower seeds or spitting into a Coke bottle.
He said Missouri was called the Show-Me State because a politician used to go around telling other politicians to put their money where their mouths were. “Show me!” the politician would say.
Daddy used to do an imitation of a politician by growling “SHOW ME, SIR!” and waving his hands around like a televangelist undergoing a brain seizure.
I never forgot it.
The truth about the state nickname, I later discovered, is more complicated.
For starters, there are many theories on why it’s called the Show-Me State. Not just one. My father’s explanation wasn’t wrong, but it wasn’t conclusive.
I did some Googling. The politician Daddy was referring to was Congressman Willard Duncan Vandiver, from Cape Girardeau County. The year was 1896. The congressman was a dead ringer for Missouri’s other poster boy, Samuel Clemens. He had a voice like a hammer and the personality of a heart attack.
Vandiver once shouted from the campaign platform:
“I come from a state that raises corn and cotton and cockleburs and Democrats, and frothy eloquence neither convinces nor satisfies me! I am from Missouri! You have got to show me!”
But historians think the Show-Me nickname started earlier. One story originates in the mining town of Leadville, Colorado.
In the 1890s, when Colorado miners went on strike, replacement workers were shipped in from Missouri. These workers were from the prairie. Many were not miners, they were farmers and cotton picking chicken pluckers.
So on the job, whenever Colorado foremen explained mining methods to the Missourians, the hayseeds would get confused. Whereupon pit bosses would say, “He’s from Missouri, you’re just going to have to SHOW him.”
There are several more stories and anecdotes. There are also Show-Me State songs, poems, nursery rhymes, and even limericks.
“There once was a guy from Missouri,
“He committed a crime in a fury,
“In the courtroom he cried,
“On the gallows he died,
“For his wife was head of the jury.”
I drove through Parkville. It was raining slightly.
Parkville is a nanoscopic border town with quaint storefronts and a Rockwell vibe. There’s not a lot here.
When my father died, the town barely had 2,000 people. Now the population is three times that. They even have a sushi restaurant now. If you can imagine.
I wound through the sidestreets, trying to go from a childhood memory. Because there was a house here I needed to see.
And eventually I found it.
I threw my rental car into Park. I stood on the curb and looked at a nondescript garage door.
After my father was released from jail, he came here. Behind that garage door is where my father placed a shotgun into his mouth and pulled the trigger with his big toe. Behind that door my life changed forever.
My life has taken a serpentine course. For a time, I lost my personality. I lost my optimism. I lost my boyhood. We left Missouri for a part of Florida known as LA (Lower Alabama). I grew up there.
But I’m not crying today. Because I’ve cried enough. For most of my life I played the role of victim. I have perpetually asked why. Why me, God? Why did this happen to me?
Why, why, why?
But as a middle-aged man, I realize now this was the wrong question to ask. I believe the question I should have been asking is “Why was I selected?”
In fact, I can almost hear the Great Artist asking me this question. I can almost hear his booming voice, echoing throughout the prairie.
“Why did I choose you, kid?” He’s asking. “Why would I choose you, of all people, to undergo a life painted with physical abuse, mental illness, shame, and suicide? Why would I allow anyone in this world to suffer?”
The answer is: I don’t know why, Lord. I don’t know why, because I’m not smart enough to know why you would select a blamed fool like me.
But then.
I was born in Missouri, God. So I guess you’re just going to have to Show Me.
Hi Sean, I’ve asked myself that same question. The “big” WHY! My background is similar. Long story short, I think I learned the same life lesson as you. We are to love and respect life, especially other’s lives. Everyone gets a different grade of earth to work. Some get rich soft black dirt, some get rocky hard clay… I think most get something in between. The soil we are given eventually answers that “why”. Because if we survive, we will want to help others, especially the ones working with rocks and hard clay. And some do a pretty darn good job! Sean of the South is definitely one of those. You help Ed Caldwell, who certainly needs and appreciates the help! You’re a good man Sean. Thanks for sharing!
Joseph’s story is recorded in the first book of the Old Testament, Genesis. It is a very meaty story which spans several chapters, it’s my favorite one in the Old Testament. Through many trials Joseph never lost faith in God, always committing himself to obedience and excellence no matter the circumstances. In many ways Joseph foreshadows the coming of Jesus.‘Whoever is faithful with little is faithful with much also’ ~ Luke 16:10
Faithfulness requires integrity in every situation, especially in the ones where we ask, “why me”.
All things are meant to glorify the supreme love of God. Think of the cross! Then there’s this, “And Jesus came and said to them, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.”~Matthew 28:18 What comfort!
God has given you a talent for words and the public ear. There must be something He wants you to say. And you have many times, “Love God, Love People” no matter what.
I too spent most of my lifetime in victim mentality: it’s the cruelest prison based on the lie that God doesn’t love me. Sixty-six love letters say otherwise.