Okay, Iโve now officially moved into creepy-stalker-guy status.
Letโs start with the where.
Kaufmann Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri, home of the Kansas City Royals.

Now for the official disclaimer.
I become an 8-year-old the moment I step near a Major League Baseball field. To be more specific, I morph into the golly-gee-whiz-wow-those-are the-New-York-Yankees-8-year-old kid who says what he thinks. Adult filter gets tossed the moment I pass through the gates.
Let me also state, this all happens without my awareness, knowledge, or any conscious decision. I only become aware of it when certain things happen.
The awareness didnโt come when I did a one-fingered salute (think tip of the hat, not Hawaiian good luck) to future Hall of Famer Mariano Rivera. By the way, he nodded as if weโd been long-lost buddies. I could see the do-I-know-this-guy question flit across his face.
It didnโt happen when I plead on behalf of a father and his young son to recent 3000-hit-club-member Derek Jeter. โHey, the boy just turned nine yesterday. How about a ball?โ
It clambered up into conscious thought when I saw Johnny Giavotella stretching.
Johnny Gee-a-what?
Exactly!
Our baseball journeys crossed a few years ago in Burlington, Iowa, home of the single-A Burlington Bees. Johnny (weโre almost best friends nowโalmost!) made a spectacular catch running from his 2nd base position to right field foul territory. I raved about that catch for days.
I hollered, โHey, Giavotella (thank goodness for names on jerseys), did you play in Burlington?โ
He happened to face me at the moment and nodded. Again I noticed the do-I-know-you look.
I shouted, โI saw you make an amazing catch.โ
I recounted the play, stabbing my finger toward second base and following the story with my hand out to the foul line. I said, โGreat play!โ
Okay, at this point, Iโm just a weird guy in the stands. I havenโt moved into creepy-stalker status quite yet.
Someone told me that Johnnyโs mother had been in the stands earlier with the fans. This someone described her as having gray hair.
So let me repeat those details in case you missed them.
Older woman.
Gray hair.
When Johnny came off the field and signed autographs, not mine by the way, I noticed an older woman in a special-fans seat on the field. She kept looking and smiling in Johnnyโs general direction.
Remember the known details.
Older woman.
Gray hair.
Well, she was an older woman.
But gray haired?
Not really.
But, hey, she smiled. And looked in Johnnyโs general direction.
Johnny left the field to get ready for the game.
I looked at the smiling older woman and hollered (I did a lot of hollering before the game even started). โAre you Giavotellaโs mother? I saw him make a great play in Burlington.โ
That was the moment, the unfiltered, uninhibited 8-year-old moment, when I bounded into creepy-stalker-guy territory.
I finally awakened to this revelation when the woman leaned forward, eyed me warily, frozen smile, and said something to the young woman in front of her. Perhaps she said, โThis dufous thinks Iโm some ballplayerโs mother.โ She probably followed that statement with, โDo you have any mace on you?โ
How embarrassing!
Would I ever do such a thing again? Iโll let you know after tonight. A friend, his brother, and I have tickets to another Royals-Yankees game. Of course, my wife (who would have insisted sheโd never laid eyes on me before if she had been there) and my best friend already know the answer to that question. But me, I sit firmly ensconced in denial.
Here are three thoughts that arise out of this experience.
1)ย ย ย ย ย Memories connect. My mind trotted through a lot of thoughts to connect that play in Burlington with the player on the field in Kansas City. We attended a Kansas City Royalsโ game. Burlington Bees are a Royalsโ farm team. That playerโs profile seems familiar. Burlington. Profile. Kansas City. Oh, my, I know that fellow.
2)ย ย ย ย ย Emotions emerge. The excitement of seeing that play in the past emerged into my present world. I buried the memory over time and in the proceeding pile of other events. I had no reason to recall the experience. But the moment the play returned so did the excitement. And it emerged in an emotional flood of enthusiasm.
3)ย ย ย ย ย Memories and emotions propel us forward. This is a tougher thought for me to grasp which makes it a tougher one to clarify to others. Iโm not even sure what I write will make much sense. Itโs more of a niggling feeling than a clear thought. But hereโs my line of thinking. I had a great time in Burlington way back when. It made last nightโs game better because it added the past excitement into the mix of present enjoyment. Therefore I anticipate another good experience at a future baseball game.
This, of course, isnโt simply about baseball. This recent thought happened to have walked down the avenue of a baseball outing but I apply it to faith.
A worship song fans a memory of the ONEโs faithfulness in the past. That memory and its accompanying emotions flame into a greater confidence in the ONE now which fuels my fire to continue on the JOURNEY.
P. S. I acted like a normalโperhaps unusually happy but not creepyโbaseball fan on my second trip to the ballpark. And, yes, Giavotella signed my game ticket.
Question: Has a past experience, whether good or bad, brought an emotional response into the present? How does that affect your future?
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