I don't have a picture of Jueves, but this sketch resembles him well |
Think
of this: a round of golf takes an average of 4 hours (240 minutes), a swing
takes 2 to 3 seconds tops, say 2.5 seconds. That means you are actually swinging
the club for about four minutes, what is the best way to spend the rest of your
three hours and fifty-six minutes? It better be with someone you trust and
like!
" |
"Mami Cuy" |
Jueves
took everything related to caddying very serious, from knowing the basic rules,
to knowing etiquette, to being honest to a fault, to protecting his player from
other players and/or caddies who cheated, to never saying a negative word.
Ever. We had great conversations on the course about just about everything:
sports, golf in particular, the local town, people, other players or stories of
matches, about how he wanted to finish high school and be an accountant one day
(there was no high school in this little town), etc. He had a great sense of
humor, and I've got to say this, I never
saw him not smile, and even when in pain, which was often, he'd just smile
and with a big smile would say, "oops, that one hurt!" and then
continue walking.
See,
Jueves was often in pain because he had a bad leg, a really bad leg. A few years
earlier he had been struck by a car, and the "doctors" in this town
of about 1,000, had somehow fused his bones in such a way that in order to
walk, Jueves would spin his hip left and forward to literally throw his bad
right leg forward around him; once he'd plant the right foot, he would drag his good leg around the left side
and forward, because there was not enough strength in his right to really be
steady and lift one foot (in this case his left) off the around.
Caddying creates memories |
Here
is the ending to the story. An ending that shows compassion and love on one
side and determination, will power, gratitude and love as well on the other. After
my family had joined a private club in Mexico City about two years after we
took up the game, we still visited Cocoyoc a few times a year. One day, a lady
known as “Mami Cuy”, brought Jueves to Mexico City to be checked by a friend of
her family who was an orthopedic surgeon. This doctor helped Jueves with his
leg to where he could walk almost normally, he still had a tiny limp, but not
longer did he need to drag, twist and throw his leg around. On top of that, this
lady’s husband gave Jueves a part time job and a place to stay until he graduated
from high school. That was nice! At the time, I was first helping the family
business in Brownsville TX, and then, attending college in Kingsville, TX. So,
I just knew more or less what was going on.
I
went back to Mexico in 1976 for a while, and have not seen Jueves him since
1979, when was working at a new course owned by the same people who owned the old
hotel. Shortly after, in 1980 I permanently moved to the United States and
never heard from him again (Note: in 1999, I visited Mexico and looked for him,
but he was no longer working at the same place and no one knew how to find
him).
This
day in 1979, he was sitting at a desk full of papers. He had short sleeves and
a tie and the title of “Head Bookkeeper”! The day before, he had left this desk
to caddy for me in a one day tournament at the old course just for the sake of
it. This day, when I stopped to say good bye, he said, “please give a hug to ‘Mami
Cuy’, I will never forget your family” and we hugged. See, Mami Cuy, was indeed,
my mother!
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