Wise Words for Writers. Mark Twain versus the Deliberately Ignorant.

            This comes on the heels of the thought that people who haven’t the courage to pursue their own dreams will try and find ways to destroy yours.  This may be true about life in general, but it is certainly true of writers.

1.  Have you heard…?  Writing may be a nice hobby, but you really need to get a job, clean the house, do the yard, drive the kids, make the beds, make more money, and… 

2.  Have you heard…?  School first, family first, work first, shopping first, eat first, sleep first…  It seems everything else is first.

3.  Have you heard…?  Instead of staring at that computer (paper) all day you should be focused on your responsibilities.

4.  Have you heard…?  You are wasting your time.  There are so many more productive things you could be doing.

5.  Have you heard…?  You should wait until you retire.  If you want to write after you retire, that would be fine, no one would bother you.

            I try not to listen.

            I have not yet resorted to putting cotton in my ears, but I might.

1.  Writing is my job.  Work is my unfortunate necessity. 

2,  All of life is important and everything and everyone matters, but my writing is no less important.  It gets a fair and solid share of my time, not just whatever time is left over.

3.  Writing is also a responsibility equal to any other.  If everyone around me despises it, it nevertheless remains the primary responsibility to myself.

4.  Writing may not interest others, but for me it is the single most productive thing I can do with my life.  It is my calling, if you will.

5.  If I wait until I retire I will only be that much closer to death without having written a word.  At that point I might never get everything written I have boiling inside of me.

            But, while I understand this and others (apparently) do not, and while it is no more difficult to explain than I have just done here, nevertheless I do not explain it as I once did.  I do not defend it.  I do not try to persuade others.  There is no getting through to some people in any case.  And I certainly don’t argue about it.  I remember instead what Mark Twain once said:

            “Never Argue with stupid people.  They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience.”  Even so.

Forever 1.5: Across the Endless Sea

            There is not much to say about the trip over to Europe except that Glen was terribly bored.  In 1962 there were no cruise ships.  There were ships that still crossed the Atlantic because airplanes were still exotic and scary.  But those ships were not designed with children in mind, and at eight-years-old there was not much for Glen to do.

            “Maybe after supper tonight you can have some ice cream.  Would you like that?”  The woman was trying to be nice despite her plastic smile.  Glen made a face and the woman looked at Glen’s mother.

            “He doesn’t like ice cream.  He never has,” Glen’s mother explained what was a well known fact in the family.  Glen could eat coffee or chocolate ice cream if he had to, but that was the limit.

            “How?”  the poor woman was stymied.  “Why, I have never heard of a child who did not like ice cream.”

            You have now so get over it, Glen thought, or something very close to that, but he kept the thought to himself.  He was only eight.

            When they arrived in Gibraltar, all of their passports got the first of many stamps to follow, and they picked up their Hillman wagon, a little European four cylinder that Glen imagined they might have to get out and push if they ever got to a real mountain.  Mom drove.  Dad rode the bus with all of their trunks and everything that felt like home.  Mom was aware of this enough to stop at a roadside stand.  She saw a sign that said Coca-cola.

            This was the end of August, and with the tourist season winding down, as it turned out they only had one Coke.  Brother Tom got that.  Glen got to try a brand new product by the company.  It was an orange drink called Fanta, never seen (yet) across the ocean.  To be honest, this was one time Glen did not mind getting the leftovers.

            After a few nights in the Hotel Mirimar, the family moved into temporary quarters in a farm apartment in a sleepy little fishing village just up the road from the city.  The village was Torremolinos, and it was sleepy.  Glen and Brother Tom were quickly bored when one parent was off shopping or linked up with the local consulate to try and find a more permanent residence in time for the school year and the other parent was busy packing and unpacking.  Sister Carol was not yet five, and the boys were not sure exactly what she did with her time.  The boys at least had each other, and for the most part, and for most of their growing years, that was okay.

            They climbed the hill out back.  They killed spiders.  They looked at the tile-lined pool which was not more than four feet deep at the deep end.  The farm girl who had to be sixteen and liked to parade around in a bikini – not that the boys being eight and ten got much out of the view – she would swim in the pool.  The boys just looked because the water was so dirty.

            Fortunately, before the boredom became acute, the family moved into the city to a nice residential neighborhood on a back street, just across the street from a Catholic church and school.  The school was fairly typical of the day.  It had two rooms, one for boys and one for girls.  The church bell went off every morning at six.  Ding-ding-ding-dingo / ding-ding-ding-dingo / dinga-dinga-dinga-dinga / ding ding ding.  You had to be there.

            Glen and brother Tom tried the American school in town first; but there all the Americans (along with other English speakers) were lumped in a single classroom taught by a would-be artist.  If Glen’s fourth grade was supposed to be colors and pastoral scenes and art history, it would have been fine.  As it was, he ended up with brother Tom in the one room schoolhouse across the street and home schooled on the rest.

            Don Antonio, the teacher, made an agreement with dad.  He took the boys and dad helped the man with his English.  I’m not sure how the English lessons went, but the boys got taught math, history (of Spain), geography (Spanish), and the like.  In a given week there were between eight and twelve separate categories, and grades were weekly with 10 out of 10 being the top grade.

            Dad wanted to encourage his boys.  He and Mom talked it over and they decided that any week where either boy brought home all tens, they would be taken out for ice cream as a treat.  Glen balked.

            “So if Tom gets all tens, he gets ice cream, and if I get all tens, he gets ice cream.  But I don’t like ice cream.”

            “Well, we will do something else for you,” his mother said, though they never decided or specified what that something else might be.

Forever 1.4: Up, What the Eyes Behold

            When Glen woke up this time, it seemed lighter than before.  It did not seem like day, but the black of the night had given way to a kind of gray pall.   The man in white was by the table and he invited Glen to come and partake of his feast.  There were eggs and bacon, toast and soft rolls, sweet rolls and danish, juice and cereal, and plenty of milk.  It seemed enough for a dozen people, and Glen enjoyed his share.

            The man in white ate little.  He mostly stared at Glen before he began a casual conversation.  “Not many people climb this high.  Most find a way around the mountain at a much lower elevation,” he began.

            Glen paused in mid-bite.  That thought never occurred to him.

            “Even those who try often fall and scatter their bones at the base of the cliff.”

            Glen swallowed.  He had tried very hard not to think of that alternative.

            “How is it that you came to climb so high?”                                               

            “The Lady,” Glen said.  “Your wife said my way home was over the mountain.”  To be sure, he never thought of anything but going over the mountain.

            The man in white frowned for a moment in thought.  “She should know,” he concluded.  “And there are less than few who climb this high and see my wife first.”

            Glen said nothing.

            “So tell me, what brought you to the Prophetic Peak in the first place, and alone I might add?”

            “Prophetic Peak?”

            The man raised his brows.  “Of course.  Didn’t you know?”

            Glen shook his head before he tried to explain.  “I saw the sign for the Prophetic Peak at the six points crossing, but I never went down that road.  I tried one road, but I wasn’t wanted or welcomed there, so I set out into the wilderness in the direction where there was no sign.”  Glen paused to swallow again.  “I fell into the Pit of Poverty.”

            “You fell?” the man asked and intensified his stare.

            Glen felt it.  “I slipped?  I was pushed by the preacher.”

            The man’s eyes softened as he nodded.  “The church that thinks poverty is a good thing.”

            “I can’t imagine how they could get it so wrong,” Glen said, casually.

            “You seem older than you look,” the man remarked.

            Glen paused to consider that statement.  He spoke at last as he went back to his breakfast.  “I’m fifty-seven and I’m eight.  I don’t understand it, but that feels right if you know what I mean.”  He looked up to see if the man understood, but the man in white could not be read and he made no comment on that subject.  He turned instead back to the story.

            “So how did you get out of the Poverty Pit?”

            Glen wiped his mouth with a napkin and went on.  “I grabbed a rope and climbed up.  It disintegrated when I got to the top, but I grabbed on to the edge of the pit and 1192 pulled me up.”

            “1192?”

            “Sir Duncan.  He rides a great horse.”

            The man in white nodded.  “I know the one.”

            “I tried to follow him and ended up on the mountainside where I met your wife.”

            “And she said climb over the mountain and here you are.”

            Glen nodded.  That seemed to sum things up, but the man was not finished staring.  Glen thought to fetch his bag and cloak, though he was dreading his climb down.  He paused when he was ready and the man rose to join him as he spoke once more.

            “Few climb to this height.  Fewer still first meet my wife.  Even fewer have also met the knight.  But I cannot think of anyone who has touched all these things without knowing that this is the Prophetic Peak.  Come.”  He turned and headed out of the cave.  Glen followed,  and again tried to keep his feet in the old man’s footprints in the snow.

            The outside was all full of fog and mist and Glen revised his thoughts.  It was probably morning, but between the sun being still behind the peak and the cloud that appeared to have settled on the saddle of the mountain, it did not seem like day yet.  The man in white took Glen once again to the edge that looked over the countryside, and he asked the same question he had already twice asked.  “Tell me.  What do you see?”

            Glen was seriously tempted to say fog, but he thought again that was not what the man was asking, so he concentrated and was surprised to find he could see something.  It looked like death.  It looked like the liar himself settled over the land below, and Glen screamed and closed his eyes.  The man said nothing, but Glen heard the sound of wings and opened his eyes again in time to see a half-dozen white birds land near them.  They looked like doves.  They looked like the same sort of birds that sang that wonderful, heavenly song on the tree of life.

            “Please sing.”  Glen heard himself say the words softly, but sadly, it was enough sound to startle the birds.  They took off back into the fog, but their wings stirred the cloud and Glen caught something unexpected through the swirls.  The image of the liar that had so frightened him became itself swirled and vanished, like it had no real substance, like it was honestly no more than a picture to be blown off by the least wind.

            Then he caught a glimpse of beauty, love, wonder, peace and holiness all stretched out for as far as his eyes could see.  It was glory on earth.  It was so wonderful even to see from a distance it made him weep for the joy of it.  The vision quickly passed as the cloud closed in again, but by then Glen was looking up at the man in white who was looking down at him.

            “Stand up tall,” the man said.  “It is time for you to go home.”  Glen wanted to object that trying to climb down the mountain through that fog would be suicide, but the man pushed him.  For one brief second, Glen felt nothing beneath his feet.  He felt like a person pushed off the side of a cliff.  He felt like one shoved off the edge of the world, and then he woke.

            He was in his bed at home, in the village.  It was early summer and third grade was over.  The whole house was packed, besides.  They were going over the endless sea.  They would spend the coming year in a foreign land, one overseas.  Everyone was excited, but Glen thought of what his father sometimes said.  “I can’t wait to see what will happen next.”

Forever 1.4: Up, Dreams and Visions

            Glen squinted as he leaned toward the edge of the mountain.  He could have said he saw the land down below, but he knew that was not what the man was asking.  The man was wonderfully patient, and Glen finally spoke.

            “I see the shadows, growing.  It is like a new dark ages coming.  People don’t read Jack London anymore.  People don’t read.  They don’t tell stories.  They watch them and are told the stories the few want them to watch.  People aren’t happy.  They are like spokes in a bicycle wheel.  They go round and round, but never go anywhere, or they only go where the driver makes them go.”

            “Oh!”  Glen drew in his breath as he saw something clear as day.  “Anger and hate are taking over, and the lies of the liar is driving them.  No one knows what to believe any longer, and the Crusaders for Christ have become few and scattered.  They cannot be lights in the darkness because people mock them and ridicule them and hate them and hurt them to shut them up.  There are too many who no longer believe anything.  No wonder they are no longer happy.”

            “Oh, look!”  Glen pointed.  “The shadow has swallowed the churches.  It has swallowed freedom.  It has swallowed common sense and made everyone ignorant of the truth.  There are too many who no longer believe anything.”  He repeated himself.  “A dark age, growing darker by the minute.  It isn’t fair, but they call it fair.  It isn’t right but they call it right.  It is like the world is turning upside-down and evil is called good and good is called evil.  But turning upside-down only puts the ocean in the sky, and everyone will drown.”

            The old man put his arm around Glen’s shoulder and helped him back into the cave.  Glen was weeping over what he saw and he wept himself to sleep.  Sadly, perhaps, the vision did not stop.

            In his dream, he saw people ruined and enslaved by the lies of the liar.  They fell into syncretism, a true relativism that destroyed value and reason together.  All things were called equal though the least bit of sense said they were not equal.  He watched the people practice a kind of tolerance that was intolerant and diversity that crushed all real diversity and inclusiveness that divided people.  They sought to destroy the cause of Christ as they destroyed the church with one departure from the word after another until the opposite was said to be true and the plain sense of the word was said to be false.  All are equal, they cried.  All are equal, they lied.

            Indeed, good came to be called evil and evil came to be called good.

            Life became anarchistic, full of chaos and crisis, and Glen found himself viewing the past where less but similar conditions gave rise to the worst sort of tyrants.  When life became so unstable, the people willingly gave themselves over to poverty and slavery for the sake of stability.  Hitler, Stalin, Mao, and yes, FDR filled the world with war, death and ideas of genocide and activities horror.  They punished prosperity and honesty and rewarded the fools.  People became slaves to government, to the ideologies of the fools, to prescriptions for salvation that dragged people into the pit.  Wide was the way to destruction, but destruction was the end.

            And he saw millions slaughtered in the name of a god that Glen did not know.  All he knew was he would never worship any god that slaughtered the innocent.

            Glen woke and saw the man still dressed or dressed again for the outside.  It seemed much darker than before, but the man said, come, and Glen decided anything would be better than his nightmares.  When he got outside, he decided it was also colder than before.  He pulled his cloak closer to his chest and slushed his way through the snow.  He tried to stay in the man’s footsteps.

            When they reached the edge that looked out over the land, the old man said the same words as before.  “Tell me what you see.”

            “It is all dark now,” Glen said.  “The lights are too few.  They are driven underground and into the darkness.  The lights are afraid for their lives and the people are charging up the hill with torches and pitchforks, determined to burn the castle and kill the monster.  But it isn’t a monster.”  Glen turned to look at the man.  “It is the only hope people have.”  The old man said nothing, he just turned Glen’s eyes back toward the land below.

            “No one listens.  No one can hear.  There are a few who decide what people must feel and what they must think and they punish anyone who strays.  Right is wrong and wrong is right.  The ones who work hard have nothing.  The ones who never work have everything.  The ones called unworthy are killed – they are allowed to die in their disease.  They are forced.  And not only the old.  The innocents are killed by the millions.  I can never live in a world that slaughters the innocents and turns away as if what they cannot see does not exist.”

            “It is all dark now,” Glen repeated.  “Faith, hope and love are taken away and the people are left being deaf, blind and dumb.  No one can hear.  No one can see.  And no one dares to speak.  They will be crucified.”  Glen looked away again and would not look back, and the old man lead him again into the cave and into bed where Glen settled back into a fitful sleep.  The night was not yet over.

            He dreamed of five giants, standing in a circle, surrounded by little men and women of all sizes and shapes. 

            The first was Asian, and he smiled like everything was wonderful, but he was on fire.  Glen could not tell if the ones around him were warming themselves by the fire or trying to set themselves ablaze as well.  He decided the latter when he saw one, a big man, standing back just a step.  That man kept shaking his head at the giant, but he appeared full or leprosy and appeared to be crumbling ever so slowly.  Soon enough, he would be nothing but dust, whereas the giant would burn for a while.  Glen had to move on.

            The second giant was below the first.  He was reaching for the sky and leaping for the heavens which he could never touch.  Curiously, the man’s head was gold, his trunk was silver, his loins were bronze and his arms and hands were iron.  Glen heard the clanking sound as those hands tried to grasp the sky, but then he saw the legs were mere copper and the feet were made of clay.  They would not hold up that bulk for very long.  Glen expected the feet and then legs to give way and the man to fall into little pieces at any moment.  Glen could not watch.

            The third giant was the biggest, but he was dressed in rags and kept in a cage.  It was a ratty, old cage with loose hinges and rickety wooden poles that could hold no one determined to break free, least of all a giant.  But this giant appeared content to watch as the other giants were being destroyed.  Now and then he would call on one of his small sons, one small enough to get through the cracks, and send that son to take a swing at one or more of the giants.  But otherwise, he simply waited, his wife and children behind him.  Glen caught sight of the wife, covered head to toe in a tent.  All Glen saw was the eyes, but they were enough.  The look was hardly human.  They were the eyes of one who was utterly broken, like a beast broken to the plow.  That was all she was good for.  That was all she was allowed.  Glen turned his eyes away.

            The fourth giant was seated on the ground with a cross around his neck, though the cross was hung upside-down.  He had no people to speak of around him.  He looked old and worn.  As Glen drew near, he got a shock.  It was not really a giant, but a composite being made up of many much smaller men and women.  That was enough, but the thing that really shocked him was what they were doing.  They were all eating themselves.  It was like they so despised themselves, they were self-destructing.  One had no fingers left.  One was without feet and already gnawing on his own leg.  Glen had to turn away again.

            The fifth giant, Glen saw was really two, one male and one female.  They also wore crosses though they were blackened, burnt, scarred crosses.  And they were fighting like they wanted to destroy each other.  The giant midget at their feet was no good as a referee.  It was egging them on and trying not to get stepped on at the same time.  The many men and women behind hardly paid attention to the fight.  They each had a blackbird on the shoulder that made horrific sounds and whispered in the ears.  Glen looked around for the doves to take those horrible sounds and turn them into heavenly song, but the doves were not present.  The people were listening to the blackbirds and hitting themselves and hitting each other even while the giant man and woman fought, bitterly.  Glen had to look elsewhere, but waking was not better than sleeping.

Forever 1.4: Up, the Mountain

            Glen climbed all that day until he reached a point where the trees themselves were not as tall as they had been, and the air was not as thick.  He thought to stop a little before dark as he found a sheltering of boulders with trees overhead.  He wanted to thank the lady for his supper and thought to let his thanks blow off in the wind with the hope it would arrive at the right place, then he pulled out his cloth and curled up and slept.

            That night he saw people helping people.  He saw that woman in India starting that great work.  He dreamed of churches feeding the hungry, helping the poor and dropping lifelines into the pit of poverty.  He saw government types come along and cut those lines while they dumped pig slop into the pit for the people there to eat.  But still, he understood that there were those in the world trying to make a difference for good – trying to make things better, and the name of Jesus was not yet ignored or forgotten.  When he woke in the morning he felt a real sense of peace in his heart.  He never felt that feeling before and rarely felt it since.

            Then he noticed it had snowed in the night.  The air was crisp, but clean and fresh.  He packed hurriedly as the feeling of urgency returned to him, and he started right out to climb.  It got cold, and in time the trees fell away and rocks took over the landscape.  He was shivering when he took out his cloth and thought to drape it around his shoulders.  To his surprise, the cloth shaped itself to his little body.  It formed a long coat and built in sleeves with mittens attached.  It even formed a hood which he put up against the wind which had picked up and was blowing fresh snow in his face.

            Glen slipped any number of time, but he never slid down the mountain, always finding some stone he could grab or set his feet against.  He began to wonder how tall this mountain might be and he began to wonder if he would ever get to the top.  He began to question the Lady in White.  He began to question everything.  He thought again about 1192 and almost went back down to hunt for him, but the urgency he felt just doubled in his heart and so he struggled on.

            Finally he came to a small cliff.  Poor Glen did not like heights under the best of circumstances.  Here he felt sure the rocks would be slippery and that he would get half-way up and slip and fall.  But there was no other way if he was going to climb to the top.

            Not looking down was the easy part, except when he had to be sure of getting his foot in the right place.  Even then he tried only to look at his foot.  Sadly, that was not always possible.  Glen did not know the way of cliffs, but he was sure the cliff was getting higher as he climbed it rather than him getting closer to the top. 

            At one point, he saw no place for his hands and thought he might have to climb down or attempt a sideways scoot where he was sure he would lose his grip.  He wanted to cry.  His eyes were drawn down.  He felt dizzy.  “No.”  He said that out loud and looked up.  There was a little crack he was sure was too small, but he reached and pulled and as he rose, he saw a bigger rock above.  He grabbed on tight.

            Glen was exhausted when he grabbed hold of the lip of the cliff and pulled himself up to safety.  The snow just had to move out of the way because he was pushing through.  When his feet were all the way up so he was in no danger of falling. He turned to his back and stared at the sky.  He was in a saddle between peaks.  On his left, the rocks continued up another hundred yards before they touched the sky.  On his right, the mountain went up much further to where it was lost in the clouds.  The saddle itself was a hundred feet across and relatively flat and Glen thought, safe.

            “Welcome.”  Glen heard the voice and shrieked.  “Do not be afraid.”  All the same, Glen scooted away from the edge and ran smack into a pair of white boots.  They went with the white pants, white shirt covered by a great white beard, white bushy eyebrows and white hair which was mostly hidden by the white hood of the white cloak that fell all the way to the snow.  In fact, the only things that did not blend into the snow covered landscape were the man’s two rosy red cheeks and two lavender-blue eyes that sparkled with life and appeared to dance in the cold air.  That, and the warm golden glow that framed the man like a halo of some sort.

            As Glen looked up into that kindly face, he said the first thing that popped into his head.  “Santa?”

            The man laughed, very much like Santa, until he stopped suddenly and returned two words.  “Absolutely not.”  The man let those words linger in the air while he reached out a white mitten.  “But come.  You must be sweating after your climb, but soon enough the heat will wear off and you will get a chill out here.  Come inside where it is warm.”  He turned to the side, and Glen saw the source of halo light behind.  It was a cave, and there was a roaring fire inside.

            Glen took that hand and followed the man into the warmth.  After all, the man looked very much like Santa.  Once inside, the man took off his cloak, and without the fat Glen imagined out in the snow, he looked more like Father Time than Father Christmas.

            Glen sat by the fire and  realized how cold he was.  After a moment, he looked in his pack and pulled out the last bit of bread.  It was not much, but he broke it and held out half.

            “Would you like some?”

            The man suddenly gave Glen his attention and graciously took the piece.  He stared at it and put it once to his nose.  He said nothing for a moment and looked again at Glen.  Glen did not feel uncomfortable under the man’s gaze.

            “I sense my wife’s cooking in this.”

            And Glen understood.  “Dressed in white with her big white puppy,” Glen confirmed.  “She said she often wanted to climb higher but that is not her way.”

            The man nodded.  “Nor is it my way to climb down.  But I will see her again.  We will be together again.  It has been prophesied.”  Glen felt glad to hear that.  “But come,” The man motioned for Glen to follow him further into the cave, to the table.  “I have been remiss in my manners.  You must be hungry.”

            Glen was, and the table was covered in dishes.  There was tender, melt-in-your-mouth roast beef, mashed potatoes, green beans and corn, apples and pears, and plenty of bread and butter and milk to wash it all down.  Glen thought he was in heaven.  He ate too much.

            Glen wanted nothing more than to sleep, but the man was dressed again for the outside and insisted Glen follow.  He took Glen a hundred yards to the other side of the mountain saddle.  Glen looked down on a great checkerboard of land and all the way to a blue horizon which he felt sure was the endless sea.  The sun was preparing to set off to their right, though it was already more than dark enough where they stood.  Glen really wanted to sleep, but the man directed Glen’s eyes to the scene below and spoke.

            “Tell me what you see.  Tell me everything you see.”

Forever 1.4: Up, The Foothill

            Glen struggled through the woods for a mile or more before he began to climb what he thought was a hill.  He figured if he could get some height and if the trees gave him a break he might catch sight of a horse and Sir Duncan riding in the distance.  He climbed for a long time and never topped the rise, but at last he came to a flat area clean of debris and trees.  He found the stones and ash of an old campfire so he figured he was not the first and not likely the last to use that spot for the night. 

            Glen pulled the cloth from his pack which he found hanging on his hip after he got free from Poverty Pit.  He was not sure how it appeared, but he was glad to have it.  He looked at the knife, but left in put away.  He had found some grapes growing on the side of the hill, so he was not entirely starving.  He pulled out the water bottle and sipped.  The bottle was mostly full and that was also a help against the growl of hunger.  He thought about building a fire, but since he was only eight, he was not sure how to do that. 

            Glen pushed himself back to a boulder that stood on the edge of the clearing.  He liked the idea of having something solid at his back.  When he opened his cloth, he found it thicker than he remembered.  He imagined that was good because he thought it might get cold on the hill.  He easily found the opening where he could use the cloth as a sleeping bag, and he crawled in and shut his eyes, hoping to sleep before it got completely dark.  Instead, he listened to his stomach for a while.

            That night was full of dreams.                                                                               

            He saw a white man in an open vehicle, smiling and waving.  He got shot.  He saw a black man in a motel room.  He got shot.  He saw another white man in a hotel lobby.  He got shot.  And a whole generation fell into madness while Asians killed them and killed each other and a black man in Africa ate his own people.  Glen was frightened by the insanity of it all, especially when he saw the offspring of the mad generation. 

            He woke in a sweat even as the sun began to rise.  Glen was afraid of the shadows, and doubly so when he saw a fire burning brightly in a repaired stone circle.  There did not seem to be a person around, and Glen did not know what to do.  He packed everything for a quick getaway, and waited. 

            The first thing Glen saw was a dog, a shepherd but solid white with the insides of the ears, pink.  The dog growled, briefly and then bounded toward Glen.  Glen shrieked and pulled his pack over his face.  He shut his eyes tight and tried not to breathe while the dog sniffed him, everywhere.

            “White Fang!”  It was a woman’s voice, and the dog immediately bounded to its mistress and wagged both its tail and its tongue.  “Are you hungry?  Of course you are.”

            Glen ventured a glimpse.  The woman was tall, dressed all in white, with long hair that fell to her waist and was as white as her dress.  She had sparkling lavender-blue eyes set in a kind face that seemed ageless.  The woman also had some bread and cheese and a bit of red apple for breakfast.  She held out a piece of the apple and Glen was slowly coaxed from his rock.

            “Have you read any Jack London?” the woman asked.  Glen shook his head.

            “Not yet,” he thought to speak as he took the apple and she cut him some bread and cheese.  “Thank you.”  He thought that was the least he could say.

            “You will.”  The woman smiled.  “That is where my puppy got his name.”  Glen looked at the puppy that was lying down and being good.  He could not remember Sally, Dick and Jane having a puppy.  “So where are you from and how did you come to be here, alone?”

            Glen paused, looked down at his pack and then at his shoes.  “I live in the village,” he said and he realized he did not know the name of his village.  And as for being where he was and alone, he did not know how to answer that question at all.

            “I know the village,” the woman said.  “It is a fine place to grow up.”

            “I suppose.”  Glen felt a sudden urgency to get home, and he said so.  “Do you know the way?” he asked.

            The woman lost her cheery smile and looked up the hill.  “I have traveled around the base of this height for a long time,” she began.  “I have often wanted to climb higher, but that is not my way.”  She took a deep breath and let it out in a soft sigh.  “For you, though, the only way back to the village is over the mountain.  I do not know how high it will be for you, but you must go over.  Here.”  She paused and produced a handkerchief.  She wrapped up an apple, a small loaf of bread and a chunk of hard cheese and handed it to him.  Glen did not know what to do, so the woman leaned forward and put it in his bag for him.  Glen gasped.  He was sure her ears were as pointed as an elf.  He was sure he saw drawings of elves in the fairy tales Mother once read

            “You better hurry.”  She interrupted his thoughts.  Glen stood.  She was right.  He felt the urgency.  He turned and immediately began to climb, but turned back after a few steps and waved. 

            “Good-bye.  You, too, White Fang.”  The woman waved back and the dog barked once in response.  Glen looked down to get safely over some rocks but when his feet were on firm ground he looked again and saw no one in the clearing.  What is more, the fire was out and there was not even so much as the smell of smoke.  He climbed and tried very hard not to think the word, ghost.

Forever 1.3: Six Points, Into the Wilderness

            Glen stood at the crossroads, not wanted and not welcomed to travel down any road.  But he could not stay there forever, and so he went back to his original idea.  He became determined to head off in the direction that had no road and no sign.  It had to lead somewhere too, and so he pressed his way into the wilderness.

            The bushes defied him, but he pressed on.  The trees sprang up to cause a zigzag path, but he would not turn back.  He found that in places there was a kind of trail, and that was comforting in a way to think that he was not the only one to venture out in that direction.  But then the trail was so overgrown it was hard to imagine that anyone had been that way in a long, long time. 

            Glen traveled for miles before he came to a pit much bigger than the hole in the road.  At least this one did not have warning cones blocking the way.  He wondered what it was, but only briefly as he got distracted by a voice crying out in the wilderness.  It was a man, a black man in an old and worn suit that had holes in the elbows and fringe at the end of the pants legs.  The shoes looked full of mud, but the man did not seem to mind.  He paced back and forth behind a pulpit and railed against the world.  First he praised God and gave all glory to God in the highest, and then he all but cursed God for ignoring the suffering of so many.  It seemed to Glen the man could not make up his mind.  And then the man paused and stared at Glen.

            “Son, what brings a white boy like you out here to the Pit of Poverty.  I would have thought someone like you would be lounging around Prosperity Palace with some ne’er-do-well friends.”

            It was hard to imagine what the man saw through the mud on a boy that just spent hours struggling through the woods, except that maybe Glen was white in his eyes.  “Poverty Pit?”  Glen pointed.  “There was no sign for this direction back at the crossroads.”

            “Of course, child.  The sign itself was so poor it crumbled to dust ages ago.  This is the final destination for the broken, the disheartened, the defeated.  It is for all those who never had a fair opportunity in life and have been crushed under the injustice of a system that is heartless and cruel.”  The man raised his hand and his voice.  “It matters not that there is no sign for this place.  People do not choose to come here.  They are driven here by the winds of a destiny designed by the heartless master of this universe.  How can a loving God be so cruel?  We ask because it appears so in our eyes.  But this life is only for a moment and cannot compare to the greatness of glory that awaits us on the other side.”

            Something stuck in Glen’s mind.  “That’s not true,” he said.  “I chose this direction.  I did not know where it would lead me, but I chose to come this way.”

            The man got out from behind the pulpit and stepped softly to face Glen.  He looked down on the boy and put a hand gently on Glen’s shoulder with the words, “Poor misguided boy.”  Then he stuck out his other hand.  “That will be ten dollars.”

            Glen patted his pockets and shrugged.  He had no money.  The man’s face turned angry and Glen found himself tossed into the pit.  He slid down the steep side and fell again into the mud.

            When he stood and looked around, he found the pit full of people of all ages, though there were not nearly as many people as some suppose.  He went to the first, his mind already telling him he had no intention of staying there in the pit, and he spoke.

            “Mister.”

            The man sat in the mud with his back to the wall.  He was perhaps fifty, gray and wrinkled, though to be sure it was hard to tell how old most of the adults were.  Glen suspected many looked older than they really were.  He spoke again.

            “Mister.”

            The man made no response.  He never looked at Glen, never looked up.  So Glen reached out and tenderly nudged the man.

            “Mister.”

            “No!”  The man shouted and sprang to his feet.  He ran off, looking behind him the whole time like he was being followed even though no one followed him.  He never did look at Glen, but if he had he would have seen a look of incomprehension.

            “Some cannot be helped.  They are not willing.”

            Glen heard the voice and spun all the way around.  “Who is there?”  He saw no one.

            “Do not be afraid,” the voice said, but since no one appeared to be saying it, Glen became very frightened.  He had to find a way out of the pit.  He had to get out of there, and he ran and repeated the same words over and over. 

            “How do I get out of here?  Do you know the way out?” 

            At last he grabbed a woman by the hand and forced her attention.  “Please,” he said.  “How do you get out of here?”  Glen meant, how do I get out of here, but the woman took it like he was speaking to her.

            “Why would I want to get out of here?” the woman asked in return.  “I have everything I need provided for me here and I get to do as I please.”  Glen looked around at the pit and the mud.  There wasn’t anything to do there, but after the first woman spoke, a second woman walked up and added her voice.

            “If you leave this place, the honker big mouths will grab you and make you work for the same things you get here for free.”  Glen hardly knew what to say, but he wondered what was so bad about work.  His father enjoyed his work and Glen thought that sometimes even his homework was interesting.  And he enjoyed learning.  But then a third woman added her thoughts.

            “They make you work like a slave, they do,” the woman said.  The other two nodded and made sounds of agreement.  “And slavery is illegal.  We deserve to get everything for free, we do.”

            “I would rather be poor and free than a rich slave,” the first woman said as the others agreed, “Yes, yes.”  It sounded so high minded and idealistic, but Glen knew it was actually drivel.  He took a step back and watched the women wander off and soon fall back into their own isolated islands of poverty and despair.  No one could like living in the pit.

            “It won’t do any good talking to the grown-ups.  They are too set in their ways.  They have made themselves deaf, dumb and blind.”

            Glen spun around again and was glad that this time there was a person he could identify as the speaker.  He was black and about twelve.  He looked older, but Glen thought he might even be as young as eleven.  “But how do you get out of here?”  He asked what was still on his mind.

            “There are lifelines thrown down into the pit, regularly.  Some of them don’t last long, but all you have to do is grab hold and pull yourself up.”

            Glen paused and stared because the young man appeared to be aging even as he stood there.  “But what is wrong with these people?  Can’t they see it?”  He finally blurted that out.

            The man, and he was a man by then simply laughed.  It was a laugh which reminded Glen of the laugh of his grandfather, Millard.  He found that curious.  He wondered if God arranged that in some way so he would feel comfortable talking to this man.  Then the man spoke again.

            “What I heard is most people are not willing to leave this place, and the older they get, the more stuck in the mud they become.  Some are broken in their mind or body.  Some are too lazy to even pull themselves out.  Most, though, are too afraid.  They don’t believe there is anything better for them.  They have been told all of their lives that they are hopeless and useless and at some point they believe it.  Then there is no helping them.”

            “That is sad,” Glen said, even as the man’s hair began to gray.

            “It is,” the man agreed as a rope came sailing over the side of the pit.  “But here is your chance.  Grab hold while you can.  Are you able to climb the rope?”

            Glen did not wait.  He grabbed on and began to climb, but he paused at the top to take one last look at the man below who was looking at him in turn.  Then he recognized the man.  It was Joe, the janitor from his country club church in the village, and he cried out to the man.  “Come with me.”

            The man shook his head.  “It is too late for me, but you better go before it is too late for you.”  With that word, the rope began to fray and disintegrate.  Glen had to grab hold of the tufts of grass at the lip of the pit to keep from falling back down.  He tried to haul himself up, but the  grass was slippery and the mud was everywhere.  The grass began to pull from the mud and he felt sure he was going to fall when a hand reached down and grabbed his hand.  It pulled him to his feet at the top like he was no more trouble than a baby pulled to her mother’s hip.  Glen shouted.

            “1192!  Sir Duncan!”

            Sir Duncan wrinkled his brow.  “What are you at this point, seven?”

            “Eight.”  Glen lifted his chin to make himself as tall as possible. 

            “Eight, and already falling into pits and traps.”  Sir Duncan was not scolding and he did not sound disappointed.  It honestly sounded like the man was simply teasing him.

            “I take care of myself.  I have to.”

            “Well –“  The Knight did not finish his thought.  He mounted his horse.  “Do your best.  That is all anyone can do.”  He began to ride off.

            “Wait!”  Glen hollered and tried to run after the man but soon lost him in the woods.

Forever 1.3: Six Points Crossing

            Glen woke up one Christmas night and thought his life on earth was a dream.  He was quite young – in third or fourth grade or roughly eight or nine years old when he found himself resting comfortably on the ground beneath a very strange sign.  He stood and brushed off the seat of his pants and saw that he was at a crossroads.  He could not remember how he got there or what he was doing there, but this was his reality. 

            Life on earth, back in the village, was a dream where Brother Tom got dibs on the Christmas presents that Glen was supposed to share, and Glen got presents he was supposed to put together.  Father put together Mister Machine.  Glen never learned how to put anything together.  So when Glen stood in the morning light and brushed himself off he was curious as to why none of the family was around.  Not that it bothered or surprised him to be alone.

            The crossroads was six points where five roads or paths in the wilderness lead off from the sign at roughly sixty degree angles.  Starting at zero, he followed sixty, one-twenty, one-eighty and two-forty degrees, and immediately realized the three hundred degree sign was missing.  But then, there was no road at three hundred degrees.  It just looked like the woods and the wild.

            So Glen started at the zero point and read the signs.  The first was Prophetic Peak.  No miles were given, but he imagined it was some distance.  Still, to climb into the heights and be able to see a long way fit his idea of prophetic.

            The sixty degree sign was Principle Point.  Glen had no idea what sort of principles that might represent.  He supposed they might be like school principals.  Some might be good, but many more were probably foolish.

            The one-twenty degree sign said Political Plain, and Glen believed it.  At eight or nine years old, politicians all looked the same to him.  And they all seemed like flat-earth thinkers as well, not unlike the village idiot, but what did he know?

            The one-eighty degree sign, opposite Prophetic Peak was Personality Place.  And it occurred to him that the politicians were somewhere between having principles and being personalities without substance.  They did want to get elected – smile and kiss babies, but they were not entirely without an agenda, even if they were not honest about it during the campaign.  Sigh.  Then it also occurred to him that prophetic people were  not often invited to parties, if you know what I mean, being by nature the opposite of those with so-called personality.

            He moved on to two-forty.  That pointed the way to the Performance Plateau.  Glen imagined there might be sports people, and celebrities.  Some that leaned too much in the direction of Personality Place might be the type that you wonder why they are famous.  But to be honest, Glen’s first thought was of artists.  He imagined the great painters, musicians, writers and poets and playwrights with actors and such all climbing up to the plateau.  He was tempted to look down that way and wondered if it might lead him back to the comfort of the cliffs of creativity and the endless sea.

            Then there was the place with no road and no sign.  Glen wondered briefly if there was supposed to be something between performance and the prophetic.  He couldn’t imagine what that might be.  In the end, though, Glen decided that none of the other directions necessarily fit.  It was the three-hundred degrees direction – the wild and wilderness that attracted him most – the chance to get out from under the constant negatives and blaze his own trail. 

            Even as he set himself to journey off into the wild at three hundred degrees from the zero point – toward the place where there was no sign and where there was no road, he suddenly became aware of others moving along the roads.  A man came to the crossroads from  the Performance Plateau.  He had his arm around his son and whispered instructions most of the time.  They went off toward Personality Place and Glen paused to wonder what was going on.

            A woman chose that moment to come out from the road called Principle Point.  She had a young girl by the hand who tugged a little against the tide.  The girl looked up toward Prophetic Peak and appeared to want to go there, but her mother shook a finger and said a firm, “No.”  They skipped over the road to the Political Plain and also headed toward Personality Place.

            And Glen guessed.                                                                                                                

            The children were being educated, gaining those skills and those all important experiences that would stand them well throughout life.  Glen looked at his empty hands.  He had no arm over his shoulder, of course, but he imagined he could do the same on his own, or he could try.

            Glen thought to experiment.  There was something about Performance Plateau that attracted him.  Perhaps it was the slim chance of seeing the artist’s alcove of his youth and stand again between the pillars of imagination and inspiration with his back to whatever that other one was.  So he wandered down that long and winding road for a time, and said hello to people along the way though he hardly got so much as a head-nod in return.  Glen thought, this was easy.  He reached a spot where he could see the village up ahead nestled up to the base of some sort of cliffs, but then he came to a road block.  There appeared to be a section under construction.  There was a big pit in the road.  Glen did not know if he could or at eight-years-old, if he was allowed to go around. 

            He had to think for a minute, and while he did he had quite a shock.  Glen saw a man and his daughter come up to the warning cones and walk right through them as if they were not there.  The man was speaking volumes to his little girl, and they walked right across the pit as if there was no pit, like they were walking on the air.  Glen watched them reach the other side and continue on the road without having noticed a thing; and he thought this was wonderful.

            He backed up.  It took a minute to muster the courage.  After all, he did notice the pit, but he set himself to pretend it was not there and walked straight ahead.  Needless to say, the cones proved a barrier, and after he pushed through them he slid on the mud down into the pit and landed flat on his rump.  That was when he saw a sign.  It was attached to the back of a cone where no one could see it from the road, and Glen wondered if the cone got accidentally turned around.  It said, “Keep out.  You are not welcome or wanted here.”  What could Glen do?

            The pit was much too steep and tall on the other side, and it looked as muddy as where Glen sat so there was no way he could climb out on the village side.  All he could do was scramble back up to the road, to the place where he had fallen in.  He thought to look to either side of the road, but there was a trench there, too.  It was a trench that got bigger and more impossible to cross as Glen came close.  And the conclusion was, there was no going on for Glen in that direction.  The truth is Glen never felt completely comfortable in any sort of performance.  He always felt he got a long way down the road, but never quite arrived. 

            Glen went back to the place of the signs and wiped off as much mud as he could.  He looked down the road toward Principle Point, but he saw the cones put up there, too.  It hardly felt fair.  He thought if he had a grown-up to hold his hand it might be different.  He might be welcomed in those places, but he did not.

            Glen wanted guidance, encouragement and support.  He never got that from his parents, his family, or for various reasons from anyone else either.  He needed to hear that he was good at something, that he might have a future, that someone believed in him.  But all he heard was he was useless and hopeless and always wrong.  He had no one to hold his hand.  He was perpetually alone, the rejected disappointment, the one to be ignored and forgotten.

            Glen thought of his father, but Father worked, even when he was home.  He was a writer and magazine editor, and what time he had he used to encourage Brother Tom in his writing.

            Glen thought of his mother, but she had Sister Carol to take care of.  They made cookies and went shopping and stuff, and Glen suspected his mother did not even know that the crossroads existed.  Sister Carol, of course, was too young to be of help.

            Glen thought of his brother.  He was only fifteen and a half months older, but he lived in an entirely different world.  Instead of Glen and his brother being close all of their lives, Mother felt it was best, perhaps especially because they were so close in age, to keep their lives utterly separated.  Brother Tom had friends and was encouraged with his friends.  Glen was told to go get his own friends, or sometimes simply to just go away.  Glen was not encouraged.  He was treated like the stupid one with his little stupid friends by Brother Tom, though to be sure Brother Tom simply echoed the attitude their parents taught him.

            Glen had no one.  He never did have anyone, really.  And as for instruction, encouragement, support – he was on his own.  He felt like he lived in the Wilderness.  He decided might as well go there.

Forever 1.2: The Village, Gone Down the Road

            When Glen was in the second grade, when he was six and ready to turn seven in November, Mother finally realized that there was no real bond between them. 

            Glen was the youngest and smallest in his class, but stayed on that early track because he seemed able to keep up, academically.  That is, when the subject interested him.  He would be the first to admit that when he was not interested, though he honestly tried, he did not always do his best work.  Then, of course, he would get the verbal whipping, but curiously it did not affect him much. 

            You see, he was never connected to the adults who were his mother and father.  Indeed, his connection to normal life at times was tenuous at best.  So the words of reprimand, and admittedly they were sometimes cruel words, while they went down deep into his heart, they did little to affect an immediate change in his behavior.  Glen could not see any reason to change.  He was already the so-called black sheep of the family.  As far as he could tell, he did everything wrong. He was to blame for everything, and no matter what he did right he was never going to be praised or treated in any positive way.  I suppose the reason he did not change his behavior is because, from his point of view, his behavior was not the behavior that needed to change.

            So there he was in the second grade and Mother started a strange conversation.  It was about his teacher, and what a good teacher she was and what a good friend of Mother’s she was.  Glen supposed she was.  He only had three other teachers at that point, in nursery school, kindergarten and first grade, so what did he know about good and bad teachers?  Then it came out.  The teacher said he was not doing his best work and his parents were concerned.  Glen protested to deaf ears.  He always tried to do his best.  He just found it hard when he was disinterested in the subject. 

            His young heart cried out that a little encouragement, some praise and positive support when he did well would make all the difference.  The problem was he did not know how to verbalize or explain that.  He did not have the words.  But then, he was not sure it would have mattered.  Clearly his parents could not see it.  Everything associated with him by that point was cast in the most negative and critical light, and that was all they could see.

            It was about that same time that Glen came to understand something special about God.   Do be careful what you ask for.

            He was seated in church, the one many in town called the glorified country club, and he listened intently to the sermon.  It must have been a special Sunday because normally children were not allowed to stay in the sanctuary during adult church.  It was probably a stewardship Sunday.

            That sermon was on the leading edge of the thinking of the day:  That we cannot love God as he loved us.  God died for us, but God does not need us to die for him.  Instead, when we give to help our neighbor we show our love for God in return.  Even at six going on seven it sounded like bull to Glen.

            That night Glen prayed.  “God, I know the minister said we cannot love you as you loved us.  I know loving my neighbor is important, but that is loving my neighbor.  If you don’t mind, if it is possible, can I love you as you love me?”  To his surprise, he got a clear answer.

            “Yes.  You can even be crucified after a fashion.”

            I am sure that is not what Glen had in mind; but then it was not six months earlier when he made Mother stand at the foot of his bed and repeat the written bedtime prayer over and over until he had it memorized.

            All the same, his life continued on the same path.  You realize, of course, these are only small examples of the kind of life Glen lived up to this point.  In some ways they sound petty and stupid.  They weren’t to a child.  Granted, no one actually said to his face, “You’re just no good,” but I can see where that might devastate a child and require therapy in later years.  In Glen’s case, there were plenty of similar things said, and regularly enough, but he actually found some comfort in the consistency.  True, at seven he did not yet understand the things he was hiding in his heart.

###

            Glen was in third grade out on the playground minding his own business and this kid who was small like him suddenly took a swing at him for no known reason.  Naturally, Glen defended himself, but when he got home, he had no defense.  His parents found out he had a fight at school and the first thing out of Mother’s mouth was, “What did you do wrong.” 

            “Nothing.”

            “So why did he hit you.  You must have provoked him in some way.”

            “No, I didn’t.  He just started hitting me for no reason.”

            “I am sure he did not hit you for no reason.”

            “I don’t know why.  I didn’t do anything.”

            Glen got the looks of disbelief.  In this case, though, he got the impression that his parents did not believe he was lying to them so much as lying to himself.  It was later confirmed that the other boy, whose parents were getting a divorce, started the hitting so Glen was not asked to leave the school for a couple of days.  But that did not matter.  In his parent’s mind, he was at fault.  He had to have done something, wrong.

            It is a wonder Glen never become suicidal.  I suppose what his father often said may have made a difference.  “I can’t wait to see what is going to happen next.”  Then also there was that eternally unanswered question.  Why did God let him live?  Why was he still here?  Glen imagined he would not be allowed to die until he found some peace with that question.

Forever 1.2: The Village in Memoriam

            Glen’s village was not so small.  They had a market where all sorts of things came in from the countryside, and they had schools for the young and prosperity besides.  They were far enough from the city to not be bothered by big city problems, but close enough to take advantage of all the things a city had to offer.  In many ways, it was an idyllic village, even if it was full of ordinary humans and all of the ordinary problems humans have.  None of the problems Glen faced were necessarily out of the ordinary.  It is just in his case they tended to pile up and not leave much room to breathe.

            Here he was, three-and-a-half, having just gotten over a disease that should have killed him, and Mother decided to put him in the Happy Hill Nursery School.  I know children these days are dumped off at day care almost from birth and by three-and-a-half they are experts; but that was not the way it was done back then in Glen’s village.  He was not so happy on the hill.  Normally, mothers and children did not face separation anxiety until the child was at least four, if not five.  Besides, Glen was technically too young to be in the program by at least two months, but Mother had a voice in the town and excellent networking skills and so she managed to get him in. 

            When Mother dropped him off at nursery school, he undoubtedly felt like most children.  He thought she was getting rid of him and she would never be back.  True, he may have had more reason to think that than most, but he cried like any child.  Well, as I understand it he cried all that first day.  The thing about Glen’s situation, though, was not the dropping off.  It was the picking up.  He basically just got in the wagon for the ride home.  There was not any of the hugging and holding and “Oh, I missed you,” stuff.

            To be honest about the school, Glen was not ready for that kind of social interaction.  With Brother Tom around, he hardly got any attention at home and so he had little experience as to how to act toward others.  He was mostly alone.  Brother Tom, though, was headed for kindergarten, and you would think that might have been a good year for Glen to bond with his mother, if not his parents, but it was not to be.  Mother was pregnant and decided that she needed the time to bond with her new baby, instead.

###

            When Glen was four-and-a-half and in Kindergarten, he got his hands on some clay and thought that was wonderful.  All of the children were to make something in a day and paint it on the next day so it could be cooked in the kiln and put on display in time for the first parent-teacher night.  Glen was excited, but there was a limit on what he could do in a single day.  For some reason unknown to him, he decided to fashion an apple.  It was glorious, egg shaped with little feet on the bottom like a real delicious apple.  It even had a stem.

            “What are you making?”  The boy with the runny nose next to him asked.

            “An apple,” Glen answered as his little hands smoothed the roundness to perfection.

            “Me, too,” the boy said, and Glen looked.  It looked to him more like a ball, but he just smiled.  The poor boy’s so-called apple was full of air pockets.   Glen knew, somehow, when the thing cooked it would collapse and look more like bent over worm guts than an apple, but he smiled all the same.

            “What color are you going to paint it?”

            “Red.”  Glen knew the golden color of the apple he pictured in his mind would not be possible.  Red was the obvious substitute.

            “Me too.”

            On parent-teacher night the family spent the night in Brother Tom’s first grade classroom.  They got to Glen’s kindergarten class when the teacher was packing up, preparing to go home.  Glen went straight to his desk and sat while his parents talked briefly with the teacher.  Then the teacher came up holding red painted bent over worm guts.

            “Glen, what is this so I can tell your parents?”

            “That’s not mine.”

            “But it is the one here.  Of course it is yours.  I thought you said this was an apple.”

            That runny nosed kid stole my apple!  Glen wanted to cry, but some pebble from the cliffs of creativity thunked him on the head.  “It’s a poison apple,” he said.

            “Very clever.”  The teacher smiled and carried it back to Glen’s parents while Glen felt like he had been poisoned.  Sadly there was not time for a proper cry.  The school was closing.

            Mother later said, “Your teacher said it was very clever, calling it a poison apple.”  It went on display with the three or four pieces that were actually very good.  And as happens so often with things schools put on display, Glen never saw it again.  It was just as well.  It wasn’t his apple.  Mister “me too” obviously stole his apple and that was Glen’s one and only serious foray into the world of sculpture.

###

            In that village, in the summer, the children always put on a show, like the traveling shows that came to the big city.  The strong man lifted boxes painted to look like dead weights, and the tightrope walkers navigated a rope that never left the ground, but what the heck.  The parents loved it, and the children collected the price of admission and sold snacks (provided by the mothers) and split the proceeds at the end so everyone had a little spending money in the summer.

            One thing that was always part of the grand finale was the pyramid of acrobats.  Three big kids got on the ground.  Two middle-sized kids got on top. And the one who was generally the smallest got on the very top.  Glen was that kid, one year – both smallest and youngest.

            Glen woke up that morning to quiet in the house.  He wondered where everyone was.  He wandered to the kitchen and got some cereal.  He was old enough to do that much, but he was honestly too young to know what day it was.  He sat around for a while by himself, nothing unusual, and eventually wandered into the den to draw some pictures.  It was an hour at least before Mother, baby Carol in her arms, and Brother Tom came home.  Brother Tom immediately came up to Glen and jingled all the change in his pocket.  Then he dumped it out and counted it in Glen’s face.

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            Glen walked home from first grade.  People did that in those days.  Glen only lived five houses from the school and on the same side of the street so he walked to and from school, and no one thought anything of it.  When he got home on that day, however, no one was home.  The house was locked up tight.  He had no way into the house and that feeling of being rejected and unwanted washed over him, again.  He tried every door.  He banged on the windows.  He sat down and cried.

            Mother eventually came home with Brother Tom and baby Carol in tow.  She never said she was sorry.  Apparently, she picked up Brother Tom after school, but did not bother to pick up Glen.  She let Glen go ahead and walk home to a house locked up tight.  Maybe it never occurred to her to pick Glen up, too.  Maybe Glen just never came to mind.  All Glen knew was she never explained, never apologized or said she was sorry, and the closest she came to admitting anything was when she admitted, “That took longer than I thought.”

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            Glen never had animosity toward his brother, even if his brother had his seriously insensitive moments.  If anything, Glen always felt sorry they were kept apart, like with a crow bar.  Being as close as they were in age, there was no reason why they should not have become close, certainly as they got older.  But that was not to be.  Mother made sure of that.  Even so, they shared plenty in their youth.  Like the time they went on vacation, sat in the back seat of the station wagon and sang the ballad of Davey Crocket, or more like shouted it at the top of their lungs.

            Born on a mountain top in Tennessee.  The greatest state in the land of the free.  Raised in the woods so’s he knew every tree.  Killed in a bar when he was only three……. 

            Mother told Brother Tom he was so funny.  I am sure Brother Tom did not exactly hear the compliment.  He was not trying to be funny.  Of course, Glen got no notice at all.