- I have many short pieces in my notes. Some of them will grow into chapters, in which case I will call them "Chapters," and move them to the Table of Contents. So this book, PACHAMAMA, will be "built" here (and you as reader can watch) as it gets built and re-built, until it's finally published. So this piece, consisting of "notes," will be changed as I work until it becomes a "Chapter."
PIECES 1
When I tossed my web gear, rifle and seabag aboard the truck
to leave Chu Lai, I knew I was going to Colorado College. I knew I was going to
study philosophy, politics, and history until I had at least something
approaching an answer to the question Why
War?
I already had a
freshman year behind me: Engineering studies at Oregon State University. It was
a rigorous program, and I’d done pretty well, transferring enough credits to
enter Colorado College as a sophomore in August 1966 with a B+ average.
But I didn’t want
to stay in engineering. I liked the courses all right: physics I especially
loved. I found that it trailed along behind the curiosities which had sprouted
in me as a boy and young man growing up in Washington and Oregon: how does the world work?
But by the end of
that year, when I looked around me, I got scared. Sure, I’d made a few friends.
Henry Ng, who was Chinese, shy and very smart, is one I remember. And of course
Gary Head, my roommate in Poling Hall, who would be going out for the OSU wrestling
team. But what I remember most was: no women! I looked around the calculus
classroom, or the engineering fundamentals classroom, or organic chemistry
classroom, and saw, basically, clones of myself. We all had K&E log-log,
24-scale split bamboo slide rules hanging from our belts, and we lived by them.
All that was fine.
But when I approached my advisor in the last weeks of the semester and asked
him if I could take a liberal arts course – French, maybe – the following year,
this man whom I liked and respected, and whom I wanted to like me, said “No.
There’s too much for you to learn. If you want to be an engineer, you have to
study engineering.”
That seemed to mean
that while I was inching my way up the socio-economic ladder of my country, I would
also be burying myself in a part of the country that, while it was improving my
lot in life, it was at the same time making me into a less interesting – and
less interested - person than I wanted to be.
Well, I had studied
engineering. My scholarships were renewed for the following year. I was
basically set for a career that would lift me out of the poverty I was raised
in. But I had also taken, as a requirement, an honors English course. We read
and wrote … poetry! And short stories! My teacher was Professor Garrison.
I wrote a fairly
long poem about a boy who sat by a creek and imagined where that creek might
go. My character made a little sailboat and set it adrift in the creek. My
imagination followed the sailboat downstream through pools and rapids like the
ones I had grown up alongside in the Rogue and Klamath Rivers in southern
Oregon. I followed that little sailboat all the way to the Pacific Ocean, where
Jack Dunham and his pals and I had hiked down the Rogue River Trail to Illahe,
then taken the mailboat on the river all the way to Gold Beach, and the sea, two
or three summers before.
Professor Garrison
read the poem. He smiled, nodded: “You should do some more of this.”
I was in love. I
don’t remember the name of a single engineering professor from that year,
though this many years later, I would say that they were all very good, even
excellent. But the one professor I remember by name from my freshman year at
Oregon State was not an engineering professor. It was Professor Garrison, who taught
my course in required English. And yeah, that class had women in it. Actual
human females.
The story drifted
down through generations of my family that one of my great uncles or great
grandfathers had been involved in the invention of that locking brake that
engaged when two railroad cars met on the tracks (with a great shuddering slam,
if they were the lead cars in entire sections of the train, and even louder if
they were heavily loaded) until the huge mechanical snake was all connected in
a great reptilian mechanism.
The story of that
braking system didn’t include a happy chapter about family wealth. What came to
us over our dinners of navy beans and cornbread was that the originators of
that simple-yet-complex braking system had sold the design to someone else who
patented it, for the whopping sum of fifty bucks, or some such. Well, fifty
dollars was a real chunk of money in the late nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries. Why, you could buy shoes for the whole family, plus stay drunk for a
week, which some of my male relatives were known to do.…(TO BE CONTINUED)
Damn- now I have to wait for the continuation...
ReplyDeleteGood stuff Dean
David, the continuation will be woven - if I can do it right - in with the other chapters of PACHAMAMA about woodland fire fighting, 30 years of carpentry, housebuilding, including log houses, my academic years, commercial fishing, and just the stuff that connects it all into my life. It's a memoir, right? Also the main essay: how I learned we were doing it all wrong since, oh, the Iliad.
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