Note—I have been struggling to find words. Perhaps the events of Paris and around the
have depressed me. Anyway, I am fighting
writer’s block. For some reason
resurrecting this Cheyenne memoir peace which originated and was adapted from a
presentation at a Panel on
Peace presented at what was then still the Congregational Unitarian Church of
Woodstock on November 30, 2008 and which was posted in this form in 2012. Perhaps it is somehow relevant.
I pretty much defined the word dork. That was the preferred term, way
back when, for guys who would now be called nerds or geeks.
Back in the sixth grade at Eastridge Elementary School in Cheyenne, Wyoming, I was the pasty,
pudgy kid with the cowlick and
thick horn-rim glasses. A bookish kid with an irritating know-it-all attitude, I
favored plaid shirts with—no
kidding—pocket protectors and an
assortment of leaking pens.
And I stuffed that cowlick under a grey, broad-brimmed
hat pinned up on one side with an Army
insignia stolen from my Dad’s World War II uniform, an
homage to my personal hero, Theodore
Roosevelt. I told you I was a dork.
Then, as now, dorks have few friends. In fact in school I
had exactly zero friends. I irritated just about everyone,
including my teachers, mostly
because I just would not shut up.
Despite being kind of a large oaf, I naturally got picked on—a lot—on the playground.
Teachers, who thought I was pretty much getting
what I deserved anyway, made a point of being occupied elsewhere when I was
getting my face washed with gravely snow,
being tied up with the girls’ jump ropes,
or having my pants pulled down.
I dealt with it by reading a lot, watching old movies on TV, and indulging in a rich, rich
fantasy life. Mostly I read histories
and biographies with a dose of hairy-chested fiction with historical
themes, by which I mean I mostly read
about war. I watched the old John
Wayne war movies on TV re-enacting my father’s war, the war of all of the
neighborhood fathers. And I, this lump
of child who never could stand up the most pathetic playground bully, dreamed of being a hero, dreamed of glory.
One fine spring day it happened. Instead of just being teased and
roughed up at recess, I was called out.
In the time honored way school boys,
I was formally challenged to a
fight. The challenger was a grade up from me. I barely knew
him. I am sure that he barely knew me. I have no memory of what perceived offense I committed against
him. Indeed, there may have been none at all. He may have just
needed to notch up a cheap and easy
victory to establish himself in the school pecking order. I was a big
kid, but he was bigger—a full head taller and maybe twenty pounds heavier.
The usual procedure was to meet out
by the dumpsters behind the school for the fight. I told the kid I wouldn’t meet him. I didn’t
have any reason to fight him.
He taunted me and we were soon
surrounded by a knot of others, all jeering. “Fine,” I said at last,
“I’m not looking for a fight. But I cut across the football field every night on my way home. You can find me if
you want.”
It was a fine, bright, sunny afternoon cold enough for heavy coats and breath that
hung in visible clouds. Time moved like molasses as I crossed the
wide school yard, the gravel parking
lot, the cinder track. I carried my books in my dad’s old briefcase in one gloved hand, and
my lunch box in the other.
Ahead a dozen or so eager spectators gathered on the gridiron in anticipation of a fine beating. The kid stood
apart, arms folded waiting my slow approach.
My heart boomed in my hollow chest, my stomach knotted, my breathing
labored. I had never in my entire life known such abject terror. I walked directly
up to my doom. “Ya gonna
fight?” he asked.
“No,” I said and tried to move around him. His fist caught me by the side of the head
before I ever saw it. My glasses and hat etched different arcs in the air
as I stumbled and crumpled ripping a hole in the knee of my jeans. I was stunned, but oddly felt no
pain. I could hear the cheering
and yelling as if it came from
far, far away. I groped for my glasses, hat, brief case and lunch box and
rose unsteadily.
“Now,” the kid demanded. “No,”
I said and tried to move forward. This time I saw the fist coming, square
at my face. I could feel my lip
split and the metallic taste of
blood seep between my teeth and
bathe my tongue. I stumbled
backwards but kept my feet somehow. “Fight! Fight! Fight!” little mob
chanted.
I clutched my bag and box tighter
and pushed forward one more time. This time he hit me in the stomach, the weak spot of any fat kid. He hit me so hard that I turned a forward somersault in the air landing with a crashing thud on my back,
all the wind knocked out of me.
I lay stunned and gasping for a moment. The crowd grew quiet. The
kid pushed at me with the toe of his
boot, not kicking but just kind
of nudging my body. I rose
very slowly and gathered my things. I began walking again. Nobody stopped me. Nobody said
a word.
By the time I walked the half mile or so home, I was strangely
exhilarated, almost euphoric.
I had not fought. They could
not make me fight. But I had
not given in. I kept getting back up. I imagined—foolishly as it turned out—that my bravery and determination had
some how won the grudging respect of
the kid and crowd. It turned out, they all just thought I was crazy and the legend of my dorkiness
only grew. But for that one afternoon, I imagined something like glory.
My mother, of course, was horrified
and was ready to march back to school
to demand punishment of my tormentors until I literally threw myself in the door to prevent it. I didn’t try to tell
her what happened. She would not have understood it. When my Dad
came home from work, I did tell him, blurting it all out with excitement and
even pride. He tried to understand
and to be supportive, but I could
tell that he would much rather that
I just “stood up and fought back.” For him, there was greater honor in taking a licking in a fair
fight than refraining from being goaded into one.
And I knew, when I thought about it laying in bed alone that night, that my
hero Teddy Roosevelt, a fat, four-eyed,
asthmatic outcast, would not have
approved either. He would have—as he did—studied boxing for months and come back and given the miscreant the thrashing he so richly deserved. I knew I was supposed to be
a failure. But still didn’t
feel like one.
Where had this strange thing come
from, this oddly prideful, totally unexpected pacifism?
Maybe I had just taken too literally to heart the Sunday School lessons about the Gentle Jesus in all of his brightly colored, lithographed glory in
my weekly study tracts. Had I
actually taken to heart the Master’s
words—I tell you, don't resist him who is evil; but
whoever strikes you on your right cheek, turn to him the other also—spelled
out in bright red letters in my very own King James Version of the Bible?
Of course as a good Christian boy, I knew that whatever
good I might have done following the great
preaching, I had washed away in my
sinful pride. There were, after all, so many ways to be unworthy.
And could this one commandment overturn a lifetime of playing Davey Crockett, Hopalong Cassidy, Teddy
Roosevelt himself, and gallant GI’s
storming bloody beaches and
imagining over and over the accolades and honors due a fighting hero? It
seemed doubtful.
Time went by. I never stopped
being the star of the violent movies
that played in my head. But I never fought. And I never ceased to
be a dork.
By the mid-Sixties, I was becoming aware of a new kind of hero, brought to
me in grainy black and white by Chet
Huntley, David Brinkley, and Walter Cronkite—Martin Luther King and the marchers
and protesters who stood up to dogs, batons, and fire hoses, singing hymns, turning cheeks, and changing
the world by just getting back up and walking again.
Later, when the time came, I chose peace over war. I resisted
the Vietnam draft. I did my stint in prison. And I was as
unfoundedly prideful over that as I had been on a cold and sunny football field
more than a decade earlier.
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