This weekend, I will make the annual pilgrimage to Dallas for my 34th consecutive OU-TX football game at the Cotton Bowl. I have so many memories of the game and weekend throughout the years.
As a child, I looked forward to the fair as much as the game and loved being able to swim at the hotel one last time before winter. The Texas state fair was where I had my first smoked turkey leg. I took great pride walking the midway with what I thought to be a baseball bat sized piece of meat on a stick. I felt like a true caveman.
As a teen, I felt held back being with my parents and wished I could have hung out with my friends at the fair. I now look back at those trips and wish I had another chance to experience a football game with my dad.
The college years brought a whole new experience. Driving down with my friends, 6 people squeezed into one room and trying to figure out where the dividing line was for the dry county. Downtown Dallas on Commerce street was the place to be on Friday night. Tens of thousands of fans yelling and screaming at each other until the street cleaner / water cannon truck cleared the streets at midnight.
As a young adult, the scene began to mellow due to the overindulging crowds. Outside drinking was prohibited and the Commerce street party became a distant memory. We found clubs and or restaurants in West End but the festivities just weren't the same.
As new parents, OU-TX became less of a "party weekend" than a chance to get away and spend a quiet weekend with my wife. Quiet comfortable hotels became much more important than being in the middle of the action.
As the father of a young man, my son became old enough to enjoy football and looks forward to the weekend more so than I ever thought. Annually rituals of drag racing and go carts at Speed Zone, thrills at Zero Gravity amusements and medium rare steaks are our Friday night highlights. The fair, with it's fried everything still provides great time and memories for our family.
We only have a few more trips together as a young family before our only son goes to college and begins to form his own traditions. I hope I'm around to be a part of a three generation tradition so I can share the experience with my son as he forges his own traditions.
Boomer Sooner!!
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