The Discovery
Channel has had great success with its program about Alaskan-king-crab
fishing, The
Deadliest Catch, fascinating viewers with its portrayal
of the extreme dangers that the courageous crab fishermen face.
But here at LewRockwell.com, we believe that there is a profession
even more hazardous to its practitioners, and one that is significantly
under-appreciated by the mass of people who work at safe, 9-to-5
jobs, like constructing high-rise buildings or imposing democracy
on hostile foreigners. And so we are developing our own pilot
of a show intended to rival Discovery’s hit, a series that will
document the adventure-filled lives of writers, the daredevils
who daily spit in the black visage of the grim reaper as they
venture out onto the high seas of the psyche, hunting the rare
and elusive prize of good article ideas. In this article, in
order to show our appreciation for you, our loyal and treasured
readers, we will give you a sneak preview of this epic odyssey,
featuring just one of these death-defying authors.
Our saga
begins on the Brooklyn waterfront. An important time for Kings
County article-fishing is early spring. This is a frigid and
stormy period on the Boring Sea where the article ideas gather
to breed, characterized by nearly irresistible urges to abandon
one’s keyboard and idle away a day in a sunny park, the sudden,
unexpected appearance of sometimes fatal, all-night parties,
and the dangerous passage of pods of migrating revelers through
the area. Despite such hazards, it is one of the prime seasons
for catching large and tasty stories, the others being summer,
fall and winter. As the local writers prepare their gear before
bidding adieu to the comforts of life on land, we caught up
with Gene Callahan, the grizzled survivor of two decades of
article fishing.
As Callahan
mends the tears in the neural nets he uses to snare his prey,
he reviews the perils of the writing life: "The average
person has no idea of the dangers we stare down every time we
leave the shelter of the harbor behind for the mysteries of
the deep. I can’t even recall the number of friends I’ve seen
laid low by carpal tunnel syndrome without a moment’s warning.
Legs falling asleep, blurred vision, neglecting to shower, wearing
the same clothes three days in a row, fighting the urge to pee:
those risks are our constant companions when we’re out in the
lonely expanses of the Boring Sea."
Callahan
has braced himself for his journey by staying awake for extended
stretches of time, since once he is out at sea his grueling
schedule will often involve sleeping for up to twenty hours
a day: "There are times when you want nothing more than
to pop out of bed, maybe take a stroll. But if you want to catch
the big ones, you need to put in the time in the subconscious,
so you have to have the discipline to ignore the siren call
of wakefulness and force yourself back under the covers."
Callahan
had planned to raise anchor and steer his boat, the SS Pointless,
out to open water on the day following our arrival, but the
gods of writing were conspiring against him. When we reached
the docks that morning he met us with a look of resignation
on his face, and announced, "There’ll be no setting sail
today. The latest forecast calls for an extended spell of chess
games and intense downpours of cocktails, some of them on the
house, covering the entire local bar area. It’s one thing to
accept unavoidable risks but quite another to be stupid, and
it’s a fool’s errand to head out in conditions like these."
By the
next day the storm of socializing had passed, and we found Callahan
up at the crack of mid-afternoon, determined to leave port before
the weather turned again. But once more it was not to be, as
this time equipment problems reared their ugly head. During
his last-minute check of his gear, our author discovered that
his Internet connection was down. Frustrated and increasingly
anxious to get underway, he reluctantly was forced to postpone
his departure again. Amidst delivering a stream of profanities,
cursing as seemingly only sea-faring men are able to do, he
explained his decision to us, "Sure, we could get to the
fishing grounds OK, and we might catch something, but what happens
when we need to do a bit of research on what we’ve pulled in?
We’d be clueless as to whether we had a valuable keeper or some
junk we’d have to toss back because it’s identical to another
writer’s haul from last month or last year. No, there’s no sense
in starting unless your vessel is in sea-worthy shape."
Finally,
on the fourth day of our mission, the stars aligned in our author’s
favor, and we accompanied him as he commenced his high-stakes
raid on Neptune’s hostile kingdom. For the first several hours
everything went smoothly so smoothly that Callahan grew apprehensive.
"There’s gonna be problems in every article-fishing venture,
and when you don’t hit any snags whatsoever at the start, that
just means they’re waiting to smack you all at once later."
It was
just after we reached the fishing grounds, where Callahan began
to cast his nets for ideas lurking in the deeps, that his fear
proved well founded. Dark, foreboding clouds appeared on the
eastern horizon and rapidly swept toward our craft, which suddenly
seemed far tinier and more fragile than it had just moments
before. The wind transformed from a docile breeze to a ferocious
beast howling of impending doom.
"What’s
going on?" we asked our host with some trepidation.
"It
looks like a distraction typhoon, the single, most-dreaded phenomena
an author can encounter at sea. Lots of writers never
recover from getting hit by one of these monsters, and wind
up marooned for the rest of their lives as a chartered accountant
or a high-school English teacher. And this very well could be
one of the foulest varieties of the species, a March-Madness
distraction typhoon stirred up by all of the college basketball
games on TV at this time of year. It’s gonna be hell trying
to ride out this sucker."
Callahan
ordered us to retreat to the relative safety of the bridge,
while he tried to secure himself to the deck using vast amounts
of caffeine and nicotine. From our sheltered vantage we watched
with growing horror as huge waves of desire to view college
basketball crashed over the ship’s railings, threatening to
sweep Callahan out to sea. He hung on despite being battered
by what seemed like hundreds of these watery assaults, but just
as the hope that he might be able to prevail against the storm
was re-kindled, flicking falteringly alive in our breasts, a
gargantuan, liquid wall smashed into the ship, ripping him loose
from his harness and tossing him like a rag doll into the blue-and-white
tumult.
We stared
helplessly at Callahan’s plight, having no idea how to operate
the vessel’s rescue equipment, and certain that venturing out
onto the deck would only result in our joining the daring writer
in the icy water. We were reeling as the reality of the impending
loss of this legendary figure, whom, in the far too brief time
we had known him, we had come to regard almost like a brother,
struck us like the hot kiss at the end of a wet fist. Then a
far-off noise tugged at the raw, ragged hem of our raiment of
grief. We sought the source of the sound, at length spotting
a tiny speck just above the horizon. Gradually it grew larger,
until it resolved into a chopper flying low over Poseidon’s
white-maned seahorses. Could it possibly be on a rescue mission?
Soon two figures became visible through the windshield, the
pilot and another man whose countenance teased us with the feeling
that we had seen it in some misty country of memory. When, these
dramatic moments having receded several hours into the past,
we next spoke with Callahan, he told us that at first he thought
the numbing cold and the suffocating salt spray had been too
much for even his tungsten-hard mind, but then his doubt had
been vanquished, for it swiftly became plain that hovering overhead,
grinning down at him from the cockpit of the whirlybird, was
none other than his old article-fishing partner, the friend
Callahan had thought would never leave the sanitarium again:
Stu Morgenstern!
Within
minutes, Callahan was climbing a rope ladder out of the icy
waters of the Boring Sea and into Morgenstern’s chopper. Afterwards,
lying in a hospital bed recovering from shock and hypothermia,
Callahan shared with us the astonishing tale he had heard while
riding in the helicopter. Morgenstern had explained that suddenly
a premonition that his old friend was in mortal danger and that
only he could save him had seized a hold of his thoughts and
hung on like Jerry Nadler clutching the last cheeseburger available
in the congressional cafeteria. That conviction succeeded, where
years of unrelenting effort on the part of leading psychiatrists
had failed, in breaking the grip on Morgenstern’s mind of the
near-catatonic state of self-absorption into which he had plunged,
spurring him to re-engage with reality. Callahan appeared to
be elated that his friend was back, and he pointed out to us
that even his fishing project had turned out OK, as he suspected
that the story of the famed duo’s reunion just might be his
catch of the season.