In just a few weeks, I will be celebrating my 75th birthday. Sixty-one of
those years I have spent watching *The Andy Griffith Show.* Some people
still ask me what is so appealing about an old black and white television
program. So I thought I would share what it is I see when I watch *The Andy
Griffith Show* and what makes it so special to me.

When I see Andy and Opie sitting on their front porch having one of the
father and son talks, I see the father I never had. When I see Ellie Walker
behind the soda fountain at Walker's Drug Store, I see Mr. and Mrs. Weix
behind the soda fountain at the drug store I visited many times during my
childhood. When I see Floyd cutting hair and talking with the town cronies,
I see myself sitting in Vircks' Barber Shop listening to the men talking
while I am reading comic books.

When I see Miss Crump telling Opie that he should go outside and play
football rather than studying, I see my seventh and eighth-grade teacher,
Mr. Elden. I recall riding home with him after we played a basketball game
against Athens.  He was laughing and encouraging us by saying we would do
better next time. We had just lost 88-0. The referee stopped the game after
the third quarter. For back then, basketball for kids was just a game. A
game we played for fun and not for trophies.

When I see Mr. Foley working in his little grocery store, I remember Mr.
Krueger, who rigged a contest in his grocery store in Dorchester, so a
little boy would win a brand new baseball outfit. That little boy happened
to be me. Mr. Krueger knew my family did not have the money to buy me such
things.

When I see Opie and his friends fishing at Meyer's Lake or playing in
Crouch's Woods, I see my friends and me fishing at the old Mill Pond in
Dorchester or playing in Rau's woods outside of town.

These are the things I see whenever I visit Mayberry, for, like little Opie
Taylor, I was very fortunate to have grown up in a small town at a time
when life was much simpler. My life back then was far from being
idealistic, yet I would not have wanted to grow up in any other place or
any other time.

I just finished a novel, *The Shortest Journey,* by Hazel Holt, and I will
share a quote from her book. “Memories are the most important things we
have when we grow old. We must treat them with care so that they will last
out our lives.”

I understand that I have a selective memory.  I choose to remember the good
times and friends that are long gone, but I also choose to toss out the bad
memories. Why hang on to those bad memories that only cause sadness when I
can keep the good memories that bring me so much joy?


Ken "Barney" Anderson
The Mayberry Guru
2906 May Street
Eau Claire, Wisconsin 54701
www.themayberryguru.com
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