Playing is something I do quite well, if I do say so myself. I enjoyed it ever since I was a kid and don’t see how I could truly enjoy my life if I didn’t incorporate some sort of play in my daily living. 
Even as a trial attorney in the courtroom, I’d play. Well, let me rephrase that. I’d “play” what I thought a good defense lawyer would appear to be to an audience.
It came easily. I saw many a movie involving lawyers. Jimmy Stewart in “Anatomy of a Murder” was my favorite. He was nothing more than an “old country lawyer” who knew how to cross-examine a witness and, more importantly, devise a theory for the defense. He solicited his client’s views on what made him kill a man who had just raped his wife, and the jury agreed that a form of temporary insanity was acceptable.

Playing a role in life creates a loving life!
I was a true ham. An actor who practiced his speech or “closing argument” in front of a bedroom mirror for hours before presenting it to 12 jurors the next day. I knew when a sad point would come up, and I was able to have my voice crack at that very moment.
Yes, I “played” at what I believed an attorney would be like and how he could be received by a jury that was asked to believe my version of facts rather than the persecutors.
(There I go again. Playing. I should have typed prosecutor but spelled the other word.)
Playing was harder in war; I seem to recall. My role models were John Wayne and Audie Murphy. I think most young boys played war. I used a fallen branch as a rifle and gloried in being shot and rolling over while going through the death throes. I loved the “Sands of Iwo Jima” where the hero, John Wayne, gets killed and others fight on to glorify him.
I took on a more rugged role as a first lieutenant. I could not hang out with the grunts in my platoon. That would be “fraternizing” with enlisted men. So, I kept to myself and played the role of a tough guy from my old neighborhood never backing away from a fight and always ready to come to the aid of a buddy.
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- Playing served me well in life. It kept me alive with my dignity intact, and my purpose finally understood.
- Play the good guy, Michael J.
- You’ll see that a lot of goodwill will come out of your performance.
- You’ll also find a lot of love mixed in with a lot of fun!
Playing helps keep me sane in a world that people often take themselves too seriously in!
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All the world is a stage I always say while I’m going on stage when I go to court!
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