Billy Coffey
Billy Coffey

Taking a punch

July 27, 2009  

Okay, I’m gonna be upfront about the fact that this is yet another rerun. My apologies. But in my defense, you’re going to have to trust me when I say this is a very busy week. And besides, it’s not like you’re getting second-hand stuff. I love this post.

This first appeared at katdish’s blog. According to her, it garnered the second highest numbers of any post that ever appeared there.

So in case you missed this the first time around, this will be new. If you didn’t, I’m going to trust that you’ll see a little something now that you didn’t see then. And if you’re in the mood for something new, you can mosey on over to Lynn Rush’s blog, where she’s running the second part of her interview with little old me.

Four years ago…
It started the way most good stories do, over lunch with a friend. This particular friend was named Charlie, an iron-fisted brawler disguised as a nerdy engineer who worked in the building next to mine.
“You should stop by tonight,” he said. “Great workout. It’ll make a man out of you.”
“I’m already a man,” I answered.
Charlie nodded and said, “Maybe. You ever been punched?”
“No.”
He put his fork down, looked me in the eye, and said, “A man never knows what he’s made of until he gets punched.”
I didn’t know what that meant, but it sounded philosophical enough to get my attention. “I’ll be there,” I told him.
All true boxing gyms are located in much the same place—the nearest poor neighborhood of the nearest city (you’ve seen Rocky III, right?). Which made getting there from the quiet confines of the country an adventure in itself. Charlie had warned me that the gym was much more old school than new, and he was right. There was no heat, no air, and no bathroom. There was merely a ring, several punching bags, dirty mirrors for shadowboxing, and a bucket to throw up in when the trainers pushed you that far. Written in bright red letters above the ring were the words JESUS SAVES.
It was, in a word, perfect.
I met with Charlie, the fighters who were warming up, and the trainers. “Gotta hand it to you,” the head trainer said. “Takes stones to show up the first time on sparring night.”
“Sparring night?” I asked. I looked at Charlie, who had looked away. I could see the smile on his face, though.
“You’re gettin’ in the ring, right?” the trainer asked me.
Gettin’ in the ring? No, I was not gettin’ in the ring. I was not stupid.
“Yeah, I’m gettin’ in,” I said. Because macho manliness trumps stupidity every day of the week and twice on Thursday.
“Good,” the trainer said. “You can get in with me, then.”
Charlie looked at me with a look that was part humor and part Oh, boy.
“What?” I asked him.
“Nothing,” he said. “You’ll be fine.”
I stared at him.
“He won Tough Man last year,” he confessed. “But don’t worry.”
Don’t worry. Famous last words of rednecks everywhere. On par with Hey ya’ll, watch this!
So. Into the ring.
Charlie adjusted my headgear and said, “Move. Don’t forget that.”
I nodded.
“And keep your hands up. Block and punch. Make your defense offense.”
I nodded again.
He checked my gloves and wiped them against his T shirt. “And for the love of God Almighty, keep your chin down. You expose that chin, and you’re a goner.”
“I ain’t goin’ down,” I said, and smiled to prove it. “So what is this, sparring or more?”
Charlie looked across the ring, paused, and said, “He’ll let you know. And wipe that smirk off your face. This will not be fun for you.”
“What makes you think—”And that’s all I managed to say. I was silenced by Charlie shoving my mouthpiece in and yelling “Time!”
We met in the center of the ring (“Hands up,” Charlie shouted. “Move…move!”), touched gloves, and nodded to one another.
I’d taken plenty of martial arts, and sparring in a dojo was very controlled and normally done at half-speed. But this wasn’t a dojo, and I wasn’t sure what I was supposed to do.
“So,” I said to the trainer, circling him, “what am I—”
SMACK!!
He threw a jab that managed to sneak between my headgear and connect with my nose. And it was not at half-speed. It was so fast I didn’t see his hand until he was pulling it away from my face.
“Move!” Charlie shouted.
SMACK-SMACK-SMACK!
Jab-jab-cross.
“Don’t stand there, do something!”
Boxing is controlled violence. It is technique. It is the mastery of punches and angles that are honed to precision by countless hours of training. Anger won’t get you through ten rounds in the ring.
It will, however, get you through one round. Because when that right cross snuck through my headgear and cut my eye, I got mad. Very.
He threw another jab, but I slipped it to the left and threw a hook into his side and another to the side of his head. His eyes widened a bit, and Charlie yelled, “Yes! Stick and move! Thirty seconds!”
I learned that night that thirty seconds in a boxing ring is a lot longer than thirty seconds outside of one. Because it felt like we stood in the middle of that ring pounding on each other for an eternity.
“Time!” Charlie shouted. Finally.
We stood there in the middle of the ring, smiling. “Awesome,” the trainer said.
Awesome indeed.
That gym was my home away from home for a while, but in the end family and a lack of time forced me to quit. But there’s still a heavy bag in our exercise room, and I still go a few rounds on it every night.
Because Charlie was right. You don’t know what you’re made of until you get punched. And whether that punch comes by standing in the middle of a boxing ring or the middle of a life, you survive the same way. You keep your chin down, you keep moving, and you never stop swinging.
We’re all going to get hit sooner or later. It’s a given in this world. But I know this. I can take a punch. I’ve taken many. But I can give one, too.
Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

Comments

  • Blessed Mom of 8

    Loved this post the first time I read it and enjoyed it once again!

    Blessings friend!
    Jill

  • sherri

    Billy- it's like a good sweet bread- good when you eat it the first time- fresh from the oven- then even better the second time around when all the flavors have settled and your taste buds know what's coming!

    Great words always bear repeating!

  • Bridget Chumbley

    I appreciate these "reruns" since I recently started reading your blog. It's a treat for me and I can tell you even if I had read it before your words always inspire!

  • Peter P

    This is the reason I never leave sarcastic comments on your blog.

    Not very sarcastic, anyway.

  • Denise

    Awesome my friend.

  • Anne L.B.

    macho manliness trumps stupidity every day of the week and twice on Thursday

    At least you're honest.

    I'd tell you to go easy on those punches with your posts, but now that I'm used to them I've started to enjoy the anticipation.

  • Shark Bait

    Exactly. Some things bear repeating. I do the same thing all the time, I just give it a fancy name and people think it's profound. :-)

    <-SB><

  • RickNiekLikeBikes

    It's true. I haven't won my championship belt yet, but I'll keep punching, and I suppose I'll take a few.

  • April

    I think this was even better the second time around! Have a great day, Billy!

  • Terri Tiffany

    This was worth a rerun!! Wow– I loved loved the ending and loved how your voice comes through! I guess you've sold me on your first book already.

  • katdish

    For the record, the highest rated post on my blog was the day I wrote a follow-up post after guest blogging for Stuff Christians Like, the third highest ranked Christian blog on the internet. And while this post did rank second in visits, everything else was a distant third.

    This is absolutely one of my all time favorite Billy Coffey posts. It is a bit of a departure for you in your writing, but for me — dead solid perfect. Love it.

    I will now quote my friend Wendy from my comments section after your first guest post for me:

    "But I have a question… Do people call him Billy or Billy Coffey? Because it's so much fun to say "Billy Coffey"…

    Billy Coffey is like mom and apple pie. Wait, no. That's America.

    Billy Coffey is like a breath of fresh air. Again, no. That's spring.

    Okay, got it now. Billy Coffey is like coffee, with lots of cream and sugar, and a good book.

    So there you have it."

    (Yes.)

  • Candace Jean July 16

    Love your left-overs. Always better the second time around.

    And perhaps this post explains why I don't have even a pink fuzzy man card.

    Love you, Billy Coffey. And yes, you never say just "Billy." It's always Billy Coffey.

  • Beth E.

    This post was new to me. I love it…especially the last paragraph.

    Great job, Billy!

  • Annie K

    Often times it's much more comfortable to learn from others who are willing to take the hit.

    Wait…that's almost good enough for quote day at Katdish's blog. And I made that up my own self. Feel free to use that anytime Billy Coffey. You're welcome. (Although Katdish, I really think you have to say his name like you're hollerin'… Billaaay – just because he's Redneck and all.)

  • Helen

    I love the way this gives some insight into the male mind that is difficult for women to explore.

    Please don't take away my pink fuzzy mancard.

  • Live well – Laugh often – Love much!

    Love this post, especially this line!"Because macho manliness trumps stupidity every day of the week and twice on Thursday."

    Post reminds of a country song by Rodney Atkins (based on a Winston Churchill quote and an Irish drinking song)

    "If you're going through hell
    Keep on going, Don't slow down
    If you're scared, don't show it."

  • Rebecca on The Homefront

    You had me hooked at "I was not stupid," but by the end I wasn't smirking anymore. Definitely brought the adrenaline from the ring…great post!

  • Chatty Kelly

    Great minds think alike.

    Here it my post on getting punched (by life in my case), if you didn't see it, http://chattykelly.blogspot.com/2009/07/get-back-up.html

    My FAVORITE line is from Rocky Balboa movie: "It ain't how hard you hit; it's about how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward."

    But I hit like a girl, and I cry like a girl, so I'm not much into boxing. But life knocks me down enough that I get the gist.

  • jasonS

    Never have to apologize for reruns. I've never read a bad post from you and there's always something I missed the first time…

  • Jeanne Damoff

    Ah. Gotta love macho manliness in all its well-trained, technically proficient, violently controlled stupidity. And yet, somehow these testosterone charged creatures survive to procreate, and the human species continues. God is merciful.

    My son tried to help me understand the appeal of getting in a boxing ring to pummel and be pummeled. Apparently the pain is part of the attraction. I confess I don't get it. But I've had my share of getting punched in the middle of life, so I've learned the lessons that way.

    I do love your writing, Billy Coffey. You have an amazing gift. And I'm guessing you also have a very patient, praying wife. ;)

  • Billy Coffey

    Jeanne – Yes, I do. Thank goodness.

  • Shanda

    In a word, perfect!

    You manage to capture a combination of truth and the masculine heart all in one. Awesome!

    May God be directing your busy week!

  • Sarah Salter

    Growing up in a neighborhood full of boys, somehow, I never really learned how to hit. I did, however, learn to kick, pinch, claw, bite, and scream in a way that'll just make your eardrums bleed. And ask my brother about the ninja star… Okay, that wasn't my best moment. (It does, however, count toward my qualification for my man card).

    This is a good one, Billy. The first time AND the second time. (And you know what they say about the third time…)

  • girlinaglasshouse

    That is a great line Billy "You don't know what you're made of until you take a punch!' I'm sure there is a scripture that says that in a more anitquated way

    This was a good line too
    " macho manliness trumps stupidity every day of the week " :)

    It is always a pleasure to come here…you are gifted indeed

  • Angela

    I read this one to my son. He gives it 5 stars. :) So do I.

  • sharilyn

    somehow i missed this the first time 'round, billy… love it! i've been out of the blog-reading cycle lately (unfortunately) and am eagerly awaiting getting back into the ring and reading backwards through your recent posts. i've missed my thrice-weekly (more or less) doses of billy-meds…

    unfortunately, i didn't take my first REALLY REALLY big life punch well, but i hope that i have recovered and am in training to keep my chin down and keep moving through the rest. it's tough to stay in the ring, swinging, when you really want to quit! thanks for the words of encouragement… they strike a one-two punch in my heart!

  • Laura

    This is a good one!

  • Lori Laws

    Super. Your a great writer! I'm glad I came here (from Lauren's blog).

    "You don’t know what you’re made of until you get punched. And whether that punch comes by standing in the middle of a boxing ring or the middle of a life, you survive the same way." So true. So true.

  • Warren Baldwin

    Good un

  • A Simple Country Girl

    Wanted to be a bull-rider since I first bounced on my cattle-ranchin' great uncle's knee, while I was still in diapers and he took me to my first rodeo. Got a helmet in the mud room. And the heavy bag, speed bag and gloves in the barn, mine. When I did become so safe? Reckon I better go blow the dust off of something and jump into the ring…