Climbing the Mountain of My Emerging Life
Life isnât preset. Itâs an endless flow of God-knows-what, and itâs up to meâitâs up to all of usâto assign meaning, as best we can, to whatâs going on.
Dig, ponder, dig some more.
A year ago I wrote a column about some of the early moments of my growing upânot just memories but profound moments of awareness; flickers, you might say, of becoming who I am. I was 77 at the time. Now Iâm... oh yeah, 78. Can you believe it? Another year is almost over. Holiday season shimmers, the smell of pine is in the air. Itâs Christmas: a perfect time to open, once again, the stocking known as memory.
In last yearâs column, I wrote about three childhood moments that created me as a personâor informed me that I had changed, moved forward in the process of becoming. These were moments of self-awareness. Gosh! I had no idea such a thing existed, but there I was at age six, playing âRed Roverâ on my elementary-school playground with a bunch of other kids and I realized: I was part of something bigger than myself; I wasnât alone. Run and play, laugh and love! Itâs called âcommunityâ (I later learned).
The interesting part, for me, as I write about it six-plus decades later, is to be able to feel the moment of becomingâto feel it as a new chunk of being, given to me almost as a Christmas present.
A second moment of becoming: I was 10 and had gotten into a fight after schoolâwith a good pal. Huh? I rode my bike home, parked in the alley behind my house, and stood there rubbing my bruised elbow, aswirl in confusion. Fighting is so stupid! I decided I would never fight againâor rather, knew I would never fight again. I knew I had changed.
The third moment I wrote about was when I was 13. I had just seen a strange, disturbing movie with my mother and sister called Imitation of Life. We had car trouble on the way home and as we waited for the repair work to be finished, a puzzling awareness hit me, totally out of the blue. âIâm a genius,â I told myselfânot with a smirk that Iâm smarter than you are, but just the opposite. I was overwhelmed. Life isnât preset. Itâs an endless flow of God-knows-what, and itâs up to meâitâs up to all of usâto assign meaning, as best we can, to whatâs going on. Weâre all creating the future, moment by moment, whether we know it or not.
Yikes. This was far more responsibility than I was comfortable with, but I was stuck with it. I pushed on with growing up. These were all private moments, quietly âmeâ in a way that was no one elseâs business. But some inner balloon (pardon the childish metaphor) was getting ready to burst. I had lousy penmanship, but I was turning into a writer, even though I hardly knew it. In fact, I got a âDâ in English in eighth grade because I just couldnât grasp the rules of grammar that were dumped on us out of the bag of marbles called education. What the heck is a participle? Whatâs an indirect object?
Attention, grade fanatics: We all learn at our own speed and in our own way. Two years later, in 10th grade, one of the books we were assigned to read was The Diary of Anne Frank. Birth of a writer! Well, sort of. I was riveted by her words, by the details of her life she bequeathed the worldâand I felt a deep compulsion to start my own journal.
It literally took a year of trying. Iâd buy a 39-cent notebook and start putting pieces of my life into words, usually prefaced with the warning: âPrivate. Do not read!â I felt compelled to pump up the importance of what I was saying, to write from the perspective that my life was significant. And the journal would never last more than a day or two. I could feel the phoniness in my words and would stash the notebook on a shelf, to be forgotten. But I kept trying! Something in me was determined to make this process workâsolely for myself, of course. Turns out that may be the hardest audience of all to win over.
And thenâIâm 16 at this point, in 11th gradeâsomething happened: I was certain, I was terrified, that I had failed a solid geometry test one day. When I got home, I opened a notebook and scribbled the words: âGod, I am worried. Scared to death is more like it.â
And the words simply flowed. I couldnât stop. I went on for four pages, writing about the test, writing about how lousy I was doing in my English class, and then... yee-haw! I started writing about my âbarren social lifeâ: about the all the parties I hadnât been invited to and my fear that I was a lousy dancer. I wasnât âtryingâ to say anything; I was just letting it all out, spewing my feelings with unchecked honesty.
Two days later I wrote a second entry. Turns out I actually did OK on the math test, much to my amazement. And I was feeling good. I wrote about driving to a Junior Achievement meeting with some friends and singing a bunch of inappropriate songs on the way home. I even inserted the lyrics into the notebook. Something was happening: I wasnât trying to churn out âgood writing.â I was simply writingâgiving words to my emotions and bringing them to life. I was finding, as I put it many years later, my voice.
And yeah, this is what growing up is all about. Thereâs nothing special or unique about any of thisâitâs just a smattering of specificity. The interesting part, for me, as I write about it six-plus decades later, is to be able to feel the moment of becomingâto feel it as a new chunk of being, given to me almost as a Christmas present, not by Santa but by Anne Frank... and so many others: my parents, of course. My friends. My teachers.
Indeed, I must take a moment to honor Mom and Dad. They gave me life, home, familyâand something more: the permission, you might say, to go my own direction. This was not easy for them, especially for my mother, who was a devout Lutheran, who had to watch her son break from the church and head off in his own spiritual direction.
Among the books I read in high school, three of them had a serious impact on my becoming: The Age of Reason by Thomas Paine, 1984 by George Orwell and Brave New World by Aldous Huxley. Their words were rocks for me to grab as I climbed the mountain of my emerging life. At one point, as I was writing in my journal, I made the declaration that I was a non-conformist. And one of the final tasks I had to fulfill before I graduated was to write my senior paper: a big-deal assignment. The topic could be of my choosing, but I had to quote a number of recognized authors. I chose the above trio. The paper was called âIs a Manâs Mind His Own?â
Yes, I wrote, it is.
I had sort of known this all along, though without necessarily even wanting it to be the case, except, as a boy, having the right to misbehave. But this was a serious step beyond boyhood. It was my first real step into the public domain. Uh oh. Now what?