![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhZ8cZUItUhu_RMQBBloj3Mgo9pDOMhuYvH1dUp6t6YLwDxVop6hZXeyM5ie4O5SGwYl6hUtLDHghyphenhyphenVt5l4BkOS3VR0vdFZ8aHrMeS1uSWcpPg1U-bpAQekUjWXeqZPPlru1_mYIp0TMVA/s200/johnny-carson.jpg)
Watching the special the other night, there were lots of images of Carson in his prime. Of course for me, I connect his prime to that wonderful downtown Burbank studio and a spry man with a quick wit and mostly white hair. It was the Mighty Carson Art Players, it was Joan Embery, it was stand up comics, and a litany of movie stars and other public figures. The clips and scenes that were shown on the special, many of which I remember, took me back to a simpler time when my whole life was ahead of me. Now that I am well past the halfway point of this ride, I look back with nostalgia and longing. When they showed Carson's sign-off from the final episode of The Tonight Show from May 22, 1992, I flashed back to the moment when I was sitting in my apartment on my bed with tears running unabated down my cheeks. Now as I watched him say goodbye again some 21 years later, those same emotions rolled back over me.
"And so it has come to this; I, uh ... am one of the lucky people in the world; I found something I always wanted to do and I have enjoyed every single minute of it. ... I bid you a very heartfelt good night."
Johnny, even though our time together has long since passed by, I miss the comforts that you brought.