Life
can get uncomfortable, but rarely so awful as Samuel Huffman’s final moments.
In 1845, at nineteen, Samuel Huffman pioneered west to Oregon with the Nahum
King party. Yearning for something more, Samuel survived Stephen Meek’s
calamitous shortcut, tending the sick and scouting for water. Maybe he even
handled the legendary blue bucket gold. With luck and gumption, Samuel arrived
alive. He carved a farm out of the rolling hills of Wren and started a family.
Then, according to the King Folk
newsletter, in 1854, at twenty-seven, Samuel Huffman caught rabies and got so
sick his brave friends put him between two mattresses and smothered him.
That’s
about how I felt, crouched, suffocating, wedged between my urge not to play the
fool and my impulse to please Pop. Light rain gently pattered. I looked out,
watching the evening fade through two tiny, round windows. The descending night
draped a chill over the ridge as I struggled not to faint in the synthetic
stench of my sweltering shelter. Several minutes remained before my cue.
Feeling forced, as if fate had pushed me into this senseless situation against
my will, I reminded myself why I was here:
Pop
drove my young nephews Jaden and Beckam up from California for a short visit.
Along with the boys, Pop brought a rented item, and a stealthy plan. After
lunch, while the boys played Frisbee, Pop and I sat at the table.
“Remind
me about the two Buddhas,” Pop said, “Who’s who?”
“One
Buddha, from different angles.” I said, “Different transmissions of Siddhartha’s
epiphany traveled different directions in separate tongues. Mahayana means ‘great vehicle’ and Theravada ‘school of elders.’ Theravada trickled south exclusively in the Pali language,
through Sri Lanka, Thailand, Burma, Laos and Cambodia. Mahayana diffused north through Tibet, China, Taiwan, Japan
and Korea, rooted in Sanskrit, but absorbing local languages along the way.”
“Which
Buddha is laughing,” Pop asked.
“Mahayana. The fat one.”
“That’s
my guy!” He smiled. “Let me show you something.”
We
went out to his car and he opened the trunk. I looked inside and gasped.
“I
want to give the boys an experience,” Pop said.
“You
can’t use that here, Pop. People believe.”
He
paused, taken aback by my honest alarm.
“Well,
no… I was hoping you would.”
“You
want me to do it? No way, Pop.”
“The
boys should get a feel for the Northwest!”
“Not
like this, Pop.”
“We
all need to laugh more!”
“No,
Pop. No way. We just moved here. The neighbors…”
“It’ll
be fun. Think of the wonder,” Pop insisted.
“Pop,
It’s hunting season. There are crazy people. Big rifles. Eyes everywhere. Itchy
fingers.”
“But
I can’t do it,” Pop said. “If I’m gone the boys will suspect something.”
“They
will,” I agreed.
“You’re
our only chance,” Pop pressed. He laid out his plan, and how I fit into it.
Pop
has always orchestrated overly intense pranks: counterfeit lottery tickets,
real gold for pretend prospecting, alarming calls from contrived consulates. As
I pondered, I recalled other experiences he had provided. Once he came home
wrapped in a toga, driving a borrowed DeLorean he claimed was a time machine.
Another time he staged a fake break-in, staying late at work, using an old
cassette recorder to capture a long, loaded silence followed suddenly by
smashing glass and conspiring voices in hushed, menacing tones. To replicate
furtive, aggressive rummaging, he screeched an obstinate couch across a wood
floor and knocked over an old console television. He smuggled the tape machine
home in his briefcase and hid it near the window behind the peace lily. Then,
after M*A*S*H, he pressed play and
cranked up the volume while Mom flossed her teeth. They went to bed. Forty
minutes later, well you can imagine it. What infuriated Mom most was that Pop
wouldn’t get up to check. She called him something that she won’t repeat,
grabbed a shoe, and went out by herself. Pop bit his pillow, swallowing giggles
and feigning sleep.
In
fourth grade I learned first-aid. Pop hired a friend and a make-up artist to
simulate an accident in order to sharpen my skills. Walking home from school,
my friends and I encountered a man sprawled awkwardly in the shrubs under the
eaves of a church, gushing blood from several mortal wounds, compound fractures
protruding everywhere, barely breathing.
“I
fell off the roof,” the man gasped weakly.
“Don’t
move,” I said, my mouth suddenly dry.
While
Pop’s friend bled out, softly moaning, obviously dying, I gathered sticks to
fashion splints, too shocked to think. My friends mulled uselessly around,
chalk-pale, hyperventilating, trying not to puke.
“Really
Pop, I can’t.”
“Please,
do this for me,” Pop said.
“What
kind of person do you want the boys to think I am,” I asked.
“Please,”
said Pop, “I’d do it for you.”
“I
know you would, Pop. Okay. All right, I will. Give it to me.”
So,
with a million excuses, I did it anyway. Why? What changed my mind? Viewing
myself momentarily from a wider frame of reference, as a small part of
everything, I just figured, why be a stick in the mud? We’re barely even here,
and then for only a short moment. So, reluctantly, I acquiesced. Life is hard
enough. Why be dull? I’ve spent my time at the school of elders, searching and
studying. Why not mount the great vehicle and blast off?
Certainly
we do all need to laugh more. Maybe the enemy is not corporations or guns or
republican or insane or immoral or religion or anarchy or management or federal
or oil or buried or secret or sin or conspiracy. The trouble could reside in
our own overblown sense of order, our insistence upon measuring ourselves
against each other and our environment, quantifying everything. It’s not our
fault. This habitual differentiation naturally results from eons of obsessively
scrutinizing various berries for poison, discriminating between harmless and
rotten meat; our brains easily jam in low gear, antique programs looping,
running uselessly on and on. Our actual foe might be our rampant drive to
divide and subdivide everything into tiered groups. These compartments aren’t
real, they are just old tools, obsolete metaphors. There are no legitimate
boundaries to anything at all. Perhaps qualities exist in us from more primal
times that we should just find the courage to smother.
Science
and religion agree that we are all the same in substance, and that that
substance is slippery, sometimes here, sometimes there, sometimes nowhere. For
even the densest matter is only statistical mist, and the closer we look the
less we can measure. Miraculously, here we are anyway, hoping and feeling,
breathing through this electromagnetic dream, flying by the seat of our pants
at the random whim of something infinite, steering a meteor. With chaos always
at our heels, we ought to enjoy the world’s cornucopia without judgment,
examining and expanding, understanding without rating, observing without
critiquing, trying without expecting. Living with heart and enthusiasm, perhaps
we can outrun pessimism, naming and appreciating the components of our shared
universe along the way, searching always for truth, reaching for answers,
wringing knowledge from stone, sustaining our journey. But until we confess
that we as humanity comprise a single organism, that we are one with our Mother
Earth and with one another, taste buds on the tongue of God, we can’t create
the reality we deserve. Without love we will not last. Void of awe, we are
nobody. Progress requires a deeper camaraderie. And we ought not pass our
cynical burden on to another generation.
After
we finished dinner, I snuck outside. While Beckam commenced his incessant
handstand practice, Jaden sat on the sofa next to Pop, reading. Pop, flinging
angry birds on his ipad, surreptitiously texted me.
In
an unreachable pocket, my phone buzzed. Through an inadequate breathing hole, I
seized three deep breaths, sucking rubber hard against my sweating face,
pulling in sweet fresh air. Evening, fading into gentle darkness, kindled
wildness inside me. I arose, unconcealed at last, and loped, hoping the
neighbors wouldn’t see, lanky and feral, in a shaggy, matted gorilla outfit,
through the bushes, over the ditch and out into the open. Then I turned and
meandered compellingly through the yard and past the living room window.
Lingering as long as I dared, I paused in a posture of vague perplexity,
cocking my head momentarily toward the chicken coop, displaying mild interest.
Then I looked all around, sniffing at the air, and ambled away toward the
woods.
“What
was that?” Exclaimed Beckam, running to the window.
“Wow!”
Jaden dropped his book and they pressed their noses against the glass.
“There’s
something weird out there!”
Pop
looked up gleefully from his ipad, breathless. “What is it?”
“Something
big and dark,” Jaden said. “It’s not a bear.”
With
no desire to deceive my nephews or stoke Pop’s dangerous obsession, I really
didn’t want to don that costume. Carl Jung called Sasquatch a manifestation of
our collective unconscious. The Tao points beyond the ten thousand things to a
flow of wholeness where every possibility exists simultaneously, namelessly.
Buddha followed an eight-fold path to similar relief. Jesus, Muhammad, Gandhi,
Mother Theresa, Martin Luther King, Jr. and countless others spent their energy
spreading the same peaceful message. Ken Kesey and the Pranksters pushed it
further. Bob Marley, the most familiar figure on the planet, called it One
Love. Perhaps they’re all trying to coax out of us an endemic rabidity that,
instead of inducing dread of water, makes us afraid of each other, skeptical of
ourselves, oblivious to nature, petrified by our own and only situation. They
worked to eradicate an epidemic of isolation in this enormous crowd, guiding us
toward a more simple reality. We imagine the world as complicated, but it is
not. One Buddha sits earnestly, while the other laughs.
What
kind of person do I want my nephews to think I am? Well, I suppose I want them
to know the real me, Pop’s kid, the type of human who, for the right reasons,
might put on an ape suit and become Bigfoot. It’s easy to think it’s too late,
that we’re too far gone, that humankind has spun out of control. It’s natural
to feel doomed. But it doesn’t have to be so. Now that this new age has
arrived, I am hopeful we can learn to get along and love one another the whole
world over, taking trouble less personally and ourselves less seriously. Things
are not so grim. Whether we meditate stoically, or hoot like the world is a
joke, we must treat each other as we would ourselves, acting and reacting
always with kindness, respect, honor and equality.
Sadly,
another small gravestone snuggles against Samuel Huffman’s. Chloa, his two year
old daughter, drank from his water glass, caught his rabies, and died too. It’s
a deep and genuine bummer to end your life between two mattresses, mad-ass
rabid, squirming and drooling, thirsty and terrified, raving, smashed and blue.
But it’s much worse to take your precious offspring with you. So, to the
misguided powerful and the selfish rich, to the bored, the fearful, and the
stiff, the unsatisfied and the indignant, to those who refuse to let in the
light, to change, and change again, and keep changing, embarrassed to become
and remain flexible and spontaneous as little children: There is still time. I
entreat you, for Pop’s sake, in the words of the great liberator Moses, and in
the distinctive voice of Charlton Heston, “Let my people go!”
Laughing
or weeping, we are temporary and aggregate, stuck here together, complicit with
all, a compound singularity. Rising Buddhas. Ghosts dancing.