FRESH
YARN presents:
Hanging
On
By David
Chrisman
We hang on
to things. We come into this life grabbing stuff and we leave it thinking
we can take whatever we've picked up along the way out with us to heaven.
And don't
think it's a matter of choice, either. No. It's got to be an instinct.
I mean, why else, when you lift him in your arms, does a day old infant
grab your ear so damn hard? Or take hold of your new shades with a grip
like Spider-Man that bends the temples all out of shape? Or wedge his
tiny finger up your nose and fasten down like he's gonna pull the thing
right off your face? You know what I'm saying? He's grabbin' on. Anything
shiny, anything warm, anything looks like it might be good. It's hard-wired
into us from the start. And I get that. But what I don't get is why we
hang on to the pain. As if it were the gold of our experience, we hang
on to it tight.
To see me,
a guy around 40, reasonably good shape, looks late 30's, you'd say I could
never have served in the Korean War, 1950-1953. But you'd be wrong. As
a matter of fact, I'm still serving in it -- well, hanging on to it. In
view of Memorial Day, a holiday which is, after all, not just a great
excuse for mega-corporations to hold a giant five-day box office fuck-fest
between Anakin Skywalker's light-saber and J. Lo's pseudo-pneumatic, over-insured,
back-end assets, but is also a reasonably significant holiday at the end
of May, in the beginning of summer -- you know -- when we think about
the war people. And as I said, I served in the Korean War.
So come with
me. Dinner-time with the Chrisman family: Five boys and one girl, three
to a side of a long kitchen table, kneeling on benches with Mom at one
end -- the beatific provisionary of all things good -- beaming over the
banquet she had set before us -- a roast leg of lamb, say, with peeled
and halved potatoes basted in the juice of the lamb -- beaming over her
brood -- her darling six children -- and across to her black-bearded,
deep-voiced, six-foot-two-inch MAN at the other end of the table, him
carving the meat with a sharpened knife where he stands holding court,
raconteur of vivid tales coloring the events of his experience with a
reverberant rich baritone.
Come with
me and see us all reflected in the California picture-glass windows. And
hanging over our glowing table of plenty, three balls of light -- one
of those sixties' chandeliers (basketball sized, Italian blown-glass globes
suspended at uneven heights) burning rich red and orange-yellow and turquoise-green,
throwing a warm halo over the meals of our childhoods and reflecting in
the windows, blackened by the night outside, along with the repeated form
of our colossus, the unfathomable male of our house, our Odysseus, Channing
Burke Chrisman, AKA Chan, AKA 'Chan Chan the shirttail man,' AKA, Daddy.
My Daddy standing there like the apotheosis of man at home, a king
in his castle.
And next
to him not a glass of wine, not a bottle or carafe, but a great California
jug of Zinfandel from the Napa Valley. Him drinking and swallowing and
chewing with the living gusto of a character out of Gilgamesh, dark eyes
shining, hair curling black around his ears, face, illuminated by a sheen
of almost imperceptible perspiration, the gloss to his joy of life. And
that great jug of wine lifting and pouring and lifting and pouring until,
by random selection on a night chosen by some devil at the roulette wheel
of domestic suffering, the joy transmogrifies, the narrative of adventure
darkens and the bitterness of his sublimated experience empties forth.
And one night
it might be a disquisition on the uselessness of women, the incompetence
of our mother or the "bitches" that ran the PTA, and
another on the mendacity of politicians or the hippies in Berkeley, the
"long-hairs" whose "hypocrite blood'll be the
first to run into the gutters if they ever get their GODDAMNED REVOLUTION!"
And on yet
another night, on one particular night each year, as if from a trance-spell
spun out of the recurrence of the season, at the end of spring, on Memorial
Day, a certain memory would begin to play. Projected like the shifting
colored lights of cinema streaming out from my father's fugue-state unconscious
onto the receptive blank screens of our enamored and entranced childhood
souls, the story would un-spool, The Terrors of the Rear Guard.
Surrounded
by Chinese infantry, alone in the hills of Korea, protecting the retreat
of a badly crippled unit, "Your father
" him speaking
third person now, "
and one private first class from Minnesota,
look away from the flies crawling in and out of the split skulls of dead
GI's by the trail, grab up from K.I.A. to each side as many rounds of
ammo as they can stuff into their pants and jacket pockets, and listen
for noises in the dark." And listen close, too, 'cuz the Chink had
been takin' off his boots, sneakin' up in his socks and killin' guys with
just a bayonet or a hatchet."
But there
was nothing to hear, nothing, that is until the long whine of artillery
shells and instant thunder, the burn of phosphorous from the mortar rounds,
the shrapnel imbedding. Then waking up later on a hospital ship at Inchon
Bay, "the U.S.S. Haven," he would say. "And they
got me in a -- I'm lyin' next to that private from Minnesota. And his
intestines are hangin' in a sack on a stand beside his bunk. Got a pump
circulatin' salt water." Waking up then, and jerking awake nights
at the slightest knock for years since. Fourth of July or New Year's,
leaping from sleep to cower beneath the California-king-sized bed and
shiver like a dog afraid of an electric storm under his wife's helplessly
loving hands.
The deadly
Chinese. The fear of the dark night. The beauty of the hills. And the
"good men, boys." "My driver, Kim." "Your
uncle Big Red Dave Johnson." "MY GUYS!"
And after
another glass of wine and another, exploding into tears of frustration
and rage at the pacifists and lefties and women in government who'd let
the nation lapse into unprepared-ness, who'd "sent those guys
boxes of ammunition more than ten years old, stamped, literally, 19-goddamned-40,
the date on it, before the GODDAMNED SECOND WORLD WAR!"
Like
the rituals of Thanksgiving or Christmas, like the carving of the Easter
lamb, this evening show of horrors played again and again so far as I
can remember back to the beginning of time, back, at any rate, to the
beginning of my idea of time, as far back as a boy could imagine, past
all recollection, all the way back to before I was born. "Before
you were born
" That mist-shrouded family past up from which
vague information percolates and seeps and burbles in the urgent half-tones
older relatives use to communicate unspeakable things. Such kindling to
a child's mind.
"The
North Korean mortars." "White phosphorous burns on your father's
hands." Words such as these conveying so malevolent a freight
of loathing that 30 years later my testicles draw in and the flesh of
my back pulls tight at just the thought of their telling. Unutterable
things of which we hear only enough to fire the want to know more, that
grow into legends in our minds, legends that wax heavier and only more
mysterious with the passage of time, that we portage through life until
our spirits so long to be rid of them we confess our disgrace without
stipulation, asking only with our cry, "But then how shall I do it?
But how? But how? But how? But how?!"
And the answer
ringing back for some reason that if we could just piece the fragments
of story together -- the half-spoken words -- just assemble the truth
of the tale, the adult knowing itself might lessen our burden. Such, at
any rate, was the answer that rang back at my moment of frustration and
paralysis and panic. It rang that nothing but fact could mend me,
the start of the thing, the acts themselves as they'd happened.
And so it
was, one foggy late spring day in 1993 after riding the 5 Fulton Express
down to the old San Francisco Main Library on McAllister Street, that,
in a reading carrel behind the history stacks, I found this fact out:
the battle occurred along the 37th parallel at a place near the Im Jim
River.
To the North
of Seoul, there is a place where the river-channel carves a lazy 'm' on
the map. And at that place, I learned, along a ridge and series of hills
the army map guys called THE NEVADA COMPLEX, on the night of May 29th,
1953, only weeks before the truce was finally settled, fifteen thousand
Red Chinese infantry threw themselves against the hundred and eighty Turks
defending outposts Vegas, Elko and Carson. And the regimental history
informed me how the first hill fell and then the second and how the third
was going down when help got begged of Uncle Sam. And Company 'B' of the
Twenty-Fifth United States Infantry Division in General Douglas McArthur's
5th Army got thrown in for support. And among the men of company 'B' --
'Baker Company' in the army lingo -- was my father.
A sheaf of
information, to be sure, and yet I wanted more. I wanted more for, as
the family whispers told it all my childhood and youth, before I was born,
our Grandmother each day had read the morning San Francisco Chronicle
and our Grandfather, the Examiner, which came out in the afternoon.
And they told how it happened on a legendary Saturday in May of 1953 that
our Grandmother had looked at the front page of her morning Chronicle
and been so appalled by what she'd read she'd hidden the paper where her
husband Raymond wouldn't find it and withdrawn to the Church of the Wayfarer
to pray.
And the story
held as well how when the afternoon Examiner had been delivered,
our Granddad Ray had glanced at his front page and being likewise blighted
had jammed the distressful headlines out of sight to slip away and staunch
his day-mare with the poultices of faith.
At least
that's how the whispers told it, in sketchy pieces, details withheld,
rickety framework encumbered only by its lading of sad intimations and
ache, vagaries that urged me -- past combat reports and battalion postings
and the rest of the historical record -- to grasp for the life of the
thing, to see in genuine print the headlines as they'd been seen, to put
myself in the shoes of those who had lived the experience that had prompted
the story, and find in their footsteps my way to release.
Because isn't
that our belief? That seeing clearly the events of the past will un-harness
that great sack of potatoes we carry through life while colleagues and
friends from college and work seem to glide through it all on vacation
in comfortable sandals and worn denim shorts? Isn't it in the end, for
example, what psychoanalysis is all about? Sleuthing out the thing we
know but do not know we know in the belief that somehow awareness itself
will reduce our pain? Lighten our burden of life? The volume of memory
that grows so heavy?
And so, many
years after the tellings and the listenings had given way to a prosaic
log of rent checks, work commutes and relationships that always seemed
to be breaking down, as a prematurely tired and grief soaked man of 30,
I found myself in the public library microfiche archives searching for
the San Francisco Chronicle and Examiner of May 30th, 1953.
And I found
them. And under the fluorescent lights of the periodicals room, paid a
quarter to run them through the printing machine. What was it that Gram
and Ray had hidden from each other in the sharpness of their love and
fear? Two shiny papers slid down to the copy tray. I held them in my hand.
The legendary articles of the Church of the Wayfarer.
But before
I share them with you, imagine for a moment that you're a Mom or a Dad
with a boy in the service. You can't get much information except the name
of your child's unit, which you remember in your prayers -- B, that is
'Baker', Company of the 1st Battalion of the 14th Infantry Regiment of
the U.S. 25th -- and that they're serving in Korea where the war, as you've
read, has been winding down. Daily you've learned with hope of diplomatic
breakthroughs, settlement deals, peacekeeping forces and U.N. plans. And
then with your morning coffee or your afternoon cup of tea one Saturday
in May, you pick up the paper and read
Can
you feature that? Tucking the paper away behind your needlework and walking
into town? Kneeling in a corner pew and mumbling the 23rd Psalm? "He
maketh me to lie down -- He maketh me to lie down-- He maketh me
"
And can you
feature, too, that man of 30 standing on the after-edge of youth, looking
into middle-age with nothing but his bag of third-hand memories and second-hand
grief clutched so instinctively tight the knuckles of his soul are white?
Finding the article again, 40 years to the day almost since it was written,
and waiting for the great sigh of relief, the undoing of the burden, the
letting go of pain? Can you stand with him in his hope to be free to finally
walk into adulthood an independent agent? All the time knowing, of course,
that that's not what would happen? The weight would not be lifted? Because
the lesson left for him to learn was that holding an article about a 40-year-old
battle in your hand is just another kind of hanging on. And that the hanging
on is permanent because it's what we're made of. And that what is left
then can only be forgiveness, if he can find it, and learning to befriend
the ghosts.
My ghosts.
For as I said, despite my youth, I served in the Korean War. I served
in it with my father in the bindings of love, and it seems, for all my
efforts to escape it, that, day over night, I serve in it still.
So I wonder.
Can we pierce the disillusion and the cynicism of our jingoistic, Disney-fied
so-called culture, the advertising blitzkrieg we live inside, long enough
to memorialize beyond the box-office grosses of whatever weekend we happen
to be in, the actual havoc wreaked for generations in actual families'
actual lives by the wars this community we call a country commits, and
to remember the men who fight them -- and now the women too -- and whether
we're grateful or not for their service, to give up a moment for the price
they pay?
©All
material is copyrighted and cannot be reproduced without permission
|