The first time I remember seeing Chris Griffin, he and a friend were making their way up a snowy path in Bear Valley, California as they headed to the same potluck my friend, Pam Jamison, and I were attending. The tall, mustached redhead held a two-pound package of raw spaghetti, his buddy a bottle of Ragu. I liked Chris on the spot.
He was probably only 19 at that point, a whole two years younger than I, but he sure didn’t look like a teenager. A couple of years later, he bounced into the Altitude, where he had bartended most of that time, and thumped his boss on the back. “Buy me a drink, Danno!” he boomed, his grin seemingly stretching as wide as his wide shoulders. “It’s my 21st birthday.”
Dan thought he was joking until Chris brandished his license. The owner of the bar and restaurant was appalled for all of three seconds as he undoubtedly thought about what could have happened had his underage bartender been nailed. Then his laugh joined Chris’s and, yes, he bought his wayward employee a birthday shot.
By then Chris had learned how to ski. I’m not sure if he taught himself or if the vast number of friends he had acquired in town — ski instructors, ski patrollers, and pretty much everyone else — gave him tips out of a sense of self-defense. I witnessed Chris’s initial lack of skiing prowess one blue-bird morning when a group of us were pack skiing. As always, we had stopped at the bottom of our favorite run to chat. Suddenly, we looked up to see a large man barreling straight down at us, his skis about three feet apart. He didn’t turn once. I was pretty sure he didn’t know how.
Did I mention this was a black-diamond run, one of the steeper in the ski area?
We’re going to die, I thought. From their slack-jawed expressions, I’m pretty sure the others thought so too, but, as if frozen, not a single one of us moved to get out of the way. At the last moment, less than five feet from the group, Chris cranked his skis to the right–his brute strength making up for his apparent total lack of skill–and came to a stop.
“Do that again and I’ll blow your head off,” screamed my friend, Kevin McDonough, who would go on to become one of Chris’s close friends.
Chris’s beatific grin never faltered.
A dozen or so years later, after losing his arm and his shoulder in an accident at a rock-crushing plant, Chris won a bronze medal in Giant Slalom at the 1992 Paralympic Games in Albertville. He would also participate in the Lillehammer 1994 Paralympic Games.
While he did not medal again, he–along with the rest of the Olympic athletes who had competed in those winter games–did get to meet President Clinton. The anticipation of that event was one of the few times I ever saw Chris get nervous. He was about to meet the most powerful man in the world, and he didn’t have a right hand to extend. How would the president react?
Since every athlete there got a photo op with President Clinton, the rest milled around the White House’s East Room after Hillary, dressed in a turquoise suit adorned with an orange, floral-print scarf, greeted them. “Welcome everybody,” she exclaimed with a big smile as she applauded the Olympians. “How are you?” During her opening remarks, she thanked the many athletes who had visited the local schools that morning and spoke about how important it was for other people to see the Olympians and Paralympians, and to understand how hard they had worked to get where they were. “Not everybody can win a gold, silver, or bronze in an athletic event,” she recalled the kids being told that day, “but they can all win a medal in life if they just keep it up and keep doing it and never give up.”
Chris was not the easiest guy to impress, but Hillary positively dazzled him. He found her warm, funny, and absolutely authentic–perhaps his biggest litmus test. When it was finally time for Chris to meet the president, he extended his left hand. Clinton took it in both of his. “It’s an honor, Mr. President,” Chris said.
“No; the honor is mine,” the president responded.
They turned to the camera and the photographer snapped the pic. Chris was making his exit when he suddenly turned around. “Mr. President,” he said. “Your wife’s a babe.”
Of all the memories President Clinton has from being in office, I’m going to guess he hasn’t forgotten that comment from a one-armed, balding-by-then redhead.
Chris Griffin lived life his way, indifferent to social convention, and he lived huge. His passing leaves a crater that no one else will ever fill. On the other hand, he impacted so many in such a profound way that he will be here with us always and even after that.
Nice piece about Chris. Still crying as I read this. It was great to see you Lynden.
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Thanks so much, Dave. I’m glad the piece touched you. It’s hard to imagine how much Chris touched us all. Here’s to getting together to celebrate him often.
great piece, so difficult to explain such a charismatic man, he was the pied piper and you never knew where you were going
Thanks, Dave. He was, indeed, the Pied Piper. Only, as opposed to the fairytale, he was 100 percent genuine. Such a lesson in how to be, accept, and enjoy yourself while creating a magical life.
Thanks for sharing this wonderful tribute to Chris!! Such fond memories of Stoneman!
Thanks, Rick. He was ridiculously special. We were lucky to have him in our lives.
Had to find a second tissue before saying thanks for such a dead solid tribute to such a great guy. Who ever met “stone face” without coming away with a new respect for the good in humanity he demonstrated each day? Thanks linden
You got that right, Jim.
I’m crying too, remembering my good friend Chris, and all of the joy he brought everyone who knew and loved him. We all have great stories and memories of him – and I will treasure mine forever.
That’s why we will all have Chris as a part of your lives forever. He became a part of us.
Thanks for sharing that memory, Phil. You’re a lucky man to have shared all those experiences with Chris.
The lump in my throat follows the tears.
We once gathered a group of his Sacramento friends and went 10 strong into the original Palms Playhouse, selling out the Show! The Waifs played one of their spectacular shows and thanked us for turning out and selling out the room. Donna wrote a song that eludes to missing one arm! London Still. “I miss you like my left arm, that’s been lost in a war”. Only Stoneman lost his right arm in a rock crusher.
Happy to have shared so many experiences with the man.
Thank you for this, Linden!! Seems that you have followed right in your Dad’s footsteps as a terrific writer! Stoneface was a man among men, an intoxicating presence that always made you feel included & acknowledged, a wonderful dancer & lover of fun!! He always lit up a room & all the faces in it. I adored him…..he is painfully missed! ????
Joani, thank you for your kind words and for remembering Dad. I love your description of Chris. “An intoxicating presence” is the perfect way to describe him. We all adored him–and with good reason! If you ever feel the urge to share any memories of him, I would love that.
Thank you for this, Linden!! Seems that you have followed right in your Dad’s footsteps as a terrific writer! Stoneface was a man among men, an intoxicating presence that always made you feel included & acknowledged, a wonderful dancer & lover of fun!! He always lit up a room & all the faces in it. I adored him…..he is painfully missed! ????