for my children, their best times growing up meant they were a stone's throw from their grandpa troy. hanging onto his coat tails as a youngster, driving the tractor (sort of) with papa watching closely, plowing the fields in the spring and dropping seeds for corn that they would eventually have to pick. the work wasn't fun, but being with papa was.
once he was gone, those old traditions sort of vanished. but because of him, they will know how to plow a field, change the oil, drive a tractor, build a shed, fix a lawnmower, use a tool, appreciate clint eastwood films, grill a steak, sit a spell, and give it their all.
for ty, he's got his papa with him everyday. in his truck. the truck papa drove every day of his life. the one that lingers with cigarette smoke and a dirty ashtray, a radio station tuned to old-timey country music, the glove compartment left exactly as it was. ty wouldn't dare change a thing, and he will move heaven and earth to maintain this truck. not because it gets him from place to place, but because his papa is a passenger. for life.
Lee Brice - I Drive Your Truck
Eighty-Nine Cents in the ash tray
Half empty bottle of Gatorade rolling in the floorboard
That dirty Braves cap on the dash
Dog tags hangin’ from the rear view
Old Skoal can, and cowboy boots and a Go Army Shirt
folded in the back
This thing burns gas like crazy, but that’s alright
People got their ways of coping
Oh, and I’ve got mine.
I leave that radio playing
That same ole country station where ya left it
Yeah, man I crank it up
And you’d probably punch my arm right now
If you saw this tear rollin’ down on my face
Hey, man I’m tryin’ to be tough
And momma asked me this morning
If I’d been by your grave
But that flag and stone ain’t where I feel you anyway.
I drive your truck
I roll every window down
And I burn up
Every back road in this town
I find a field, I tear it up
Til all the pain’s a cloud of dust
Yeah, sometimes I drive your truck.
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