Second Best Hand and Broken Window Serenade
By Bobby Neal Winters
In another life, I was briefly the pastor of the First United Methodist Church of Opolis, Kansas. During that time, I got to know some fine people, some fine characters. One of those was a man who I will call the Teacher, to preserve his anonymity for the sake of his family. I don’t know why I bother because everyone in Opolis will know exactly who I am talking about by my description.
He was a singular character.
The Teacher had a standing poker game in his workshop. I am not a gambler or a poker player, but he had invited me to play on a couple of occasions, and he gave me lessons. The first lesson cost me $10 and the second cost me $5. All paid a little at a time in nickels, dimes, and quarters.
He liked Texas Hold-em and Omaha. I would be at a loss to explain the rules of either of them right now other than to say the hands are evaluated like the standard poker hand.
The Teacher taught me a lot. The first rule was this: “If you have the cards, make them pay.”
This was paired with a second rule that I will share with you in a minute. The pairing of these two rules was in a fashion the ancient Greeks would have called a paradox and modern theologians would call cruciform tension.
I learned the second rule when I had drawn a full-house. It’s a very good hand. I was applying rule one and betting as hard as I could with nickels, dimes, and quarters.
Then came the time to lay my cards on the table and I did.
The Teacher looked at my cards and said, “I am so sorry,” as he laid down four-of-a-kind and raked my change into his pot.
He then taught me rule two: “There is nothing worse than a second-best hand.”
That may have been the night I considered my poker education complete.
I was listening to one of my current favorite songs this morning on the way to school when this connection crossed my mind.
The song is “Broken Window Serenade” by the group Whiskey Myers. The song tells the tale of a man’s love of a beautiful woman. More than a beautiful woman, a woman cursed with beauty.
Her beauty took her to Hollywood. It wasn’t enough to make her a movie star, but it was enough to get her work as a stripper. Following that came substance abuse, wasting away, and, finally, death.
Life had dealt her a second-best hand. She played it, but maybe she wasn’t beautiful enough; maybe that was all she was and didn’t develop any of the skills that need to go with that to make a movie star.
As I’ve grown older, I’ve moved from being jealous of the beautiful to feeling something not un-akin to pity.
The Beautiful--by their very nature--have this asset on full display. You can just look at them and know they are beautiful. That’s just the nature of the quality. There is something within us that causes us to react positively to this. Though as we develop in our own ambitions, the positive reaction can turn to jealousy.
They can become victims of their own beauty if they pay too much attention to those who whisper in their ears that they need to go to Hollywood.
It is my personal opinion that by some plan--God’s, Evolution’s, or Nature’s, take your pick--that the Beautiful are meant to be leaders. We are naturally drawn to them; don’t deny it.
The problem is that to be a leader more is needed than just beauty. Other skills must be developed. Some do develop these skills and become leaders. You look at them and like them and want them to like you. You’ll do what they ask.
Think about it: There are not very many ugly people in leadership positions.
There are those who develop the skills but don’t wind up in the positions of leadership. In some sense, they’ve been dealt a second-best hand themselves.
The thing about being dealt a second-best hand is what you do in the next round. You can let a second-best hand and wind up in a poignant country song, or you could do something else.
I’ve been privileged to be around some beautiful, skillful people in my community. For whatever reason, they’ve not become movie stars; they’ve not become politicians. Nor have they taken the dark road described in “Broken Window Serenade.”
They took their beauty and their skills and have devoted themselves to community service. You look at them and like them and want them to like you. They are great in getting people to become involved in helping the community.
Anyway, that’s just me looking “through a broken window with a different point of view.”
Bobby Winters, a native of Harden City, Oklahoma, blogs at redneckmath.blogspot.com and okieinexile.blogspot.com. He invites you to “like” the National Association of Lawn Mowers on Facebook. Search for him by name on YouTube.
