Weekend
by
Robert Klassen
by Robert Klassen
To
have an old friend visit for three days after several years of separation
is a rare pleasure. I live far off the beaten track, so I appreciate
the extra effort too.
I
met Bill in 1972, when he came to work in our emergency room. He
had a full beard and long dark hair, a kind of savage appearance,
but he knew his business inside and out. He should, he had recently
returned from a full tour in Vietnam, where he had worked in the
receiving trauma center at a huge Air Force base. He had witnessed
and dealt with every horrible injury that war can inflict.
Bill
was suffering from culture shock in those days, trying to adjust
to everyday American life outside of a foreign war zone – nobody
was shelling our hospital every night. It was tough, but he had
some things going for him. One, he was willing to talk. Two, he
could tell a good story. Three, he had preserved his sense of humor.
The first story I heard him tell was about his initial bus trip
to the base, accompanied by gun ship helicopters firing .50 caliber
rounds straight down into jungle on each side of the road. He made
the experience sound funny. It wasn’t, but he made us laugh.
Bill
had no illusions about that war, before, during, or after. Faced
with Satan’s choice of enlistment or the draft, he had enlisted,
but he knew the whole thing was a political fraud from the start
(certain family pressures kept him from the Canadian solution, pressures
the family would live to regret). He did the job, survived, and
returned to remake his life.
Curiosity
has saved many lives, I think, and Bill had abundant curiosity.
He studied new subjects at the university, and he studied new subjects
on his own. Always we talked about these subjects. How do you make
beer? We made beer. What does free-market mean? We learned. How
do you cut a tree down? Who was Thomas Paine? On and on and on,
year after year, we partied and studied and talked.
We’re
both getting on in years, and we’re both slowing down. We have experienced
the death of loved ones, the misery and expense of divorce, the
ravages of taxes, success here, and failure there, and the acute
awareness of mortal fragility. So what did we talk about for three
days?
New
ideas, like The
Voluntary City. This is an eye-opening collection of essays
on how people manage(d) to solve their social problems without the
state, plus a brief but critical look at the phony epistemology
of state planners.
Over
and over, something would remind me of Mike (In Tokyo) Rogers’ new
book. Bill told a story about his trip to Nepal, and the flight
to Thailand. It was his birthday, so the airline put him in first
class – free. There his glass was never empty. That reminded me
of Mike Rogers’ story about New Year celebrations, so I got out
the book, and we read the story out loud, laughing all the way.
Then we read another story. And another. We read the whole book
aloud! The only other writer I could read like that is Mark Twain.
Then
the weekend was over. We had talked and read and laughed and cried,
listened to classical music, rock, and jazz, we drank wine, smoked
in silence, watched the Ospreys hunt, and walked in the forest.
It was good. By the time I got up this morning, Bill was gone. No
regrets, and no good-byes.
June
15, 2005
Robert
Klassen [send him mail]
retired from a forty-year career in critical-care respiratory therapy.
He is the author of five books, including Atlantis:
A Novel about Economic Government,
and Economic
Government, which describe a solution
to the problem of political government. Here's
his web site.
Copyright
© 2005 Robert Klassen
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