Archive for December, 2011

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Not Enough Stars

He was my hero.

    He seemed larger than life, almost a legend, like Paul Bunyan: a tall, blond, curly-haired, blue-eyed teddy bear of a man, affectionately (and accurately) known as "Big John" Dwyer.

    I met him when he was a counselor my first year at Vinton County camp, when I was 11. He was not my counselor, but I liked him right away. How could you not? He always seemed so full of energy and joy.  Among all the wonderful people I met there, and all the counselors whom I wanted to grow up and be just like, John stood out.
    One night there was a group campfire down by the shelter house, with story-telling and singing. John was sitting near me, and heard me singing harmony. He scooted over closer, complimented me on my singing and we talked about the music we learned from our families. We sang "O Danny Boy" together, his deep voice and my piping treble, and laughed.
   The night was very clear, and while the fire kept my front side warm, my back was cold. John tucked me up against him to stay warm, put a strong arm around me. We looked up at the sky together. I remember wondering aloud why it was that there were so many more stars here than there were at home. He explained to me the effect cities have on your ability to see the stars.
        "Sometimes you have to go away from so many people, get off by yourself, in order to be able to really see" he said and pointed out some constellations to me.
    After a while I got tired and laid my head against him, listened to his  voice rumble quietly through his chest as he spoke, just the way I liked to do with my grandfather. I nearly went to sleep, so warm and comfortable and safe it was there.
   That's my strongest, most enduring memory of John Dwyer: strong as an oak, a gentle, loving soul who kept a scrawny little girl warm one night and showed her the stars. That's the one I hold on to.

   Tonight I learned that John Dwyer died in 2009, right here in Columbus, in fact, after a long and often unsuccessful battle with bipolar disorder.
    I knew he had some sort of mental illness. I was there that night at camp, a few years after i met him, when he had a breakdown, left a camp full of frightened, grief-stricken people behind.

    It was the last night of camp and we were having our closing ceremony where everyone got a chance to say a personal goodbye to everyone else. But before I ever got a chance to say goodbye to John, he was gone.
    There had been some talk among the campers in the last few days. The kids in John's campsite said he was occasionally… erratic, unsettled…. not the John they used to know. The counselors seemed concerned but wouldn't talk about it with us. And like typical kids, most of us assumed it couldn't be anything too serious. I mean, this was Big John Dwyer! We all looked up to him, literally and physically. Maybe he was having a rough time about something, but he'd work it out.
    And then suddenly there was a commotion, and John was storming off, but taking someone with him: one of his campers (and my best friend, as it happened). He wasn't exactly dragging her, wasn't really holding her hostage, but he wouldn't let her go, and he wouldn't come back to the group. My memories of exactly what occurred are a little fuzzy. Maybe I don't want to remember. Mostly I recall the emotion: confusion, anxiety and fear. It billowed and snapped through the milling campers like a flag moves in a windstorm. Counselors tried to pull their campsites together and calm them as other staff quietly spoke to John.
   I do remember very clearly the priest, Father Al, talking in quiet tones like you would use to coax a frightened, snapping dog.
        "Let go of her arm and come back to the group John. Yes, you can. Take a hand John. Take a hand, if you care to".
    I remember that phrase, "Take a hand, John" and that image- Al reaching out his hand, and John looking at it. The only sounds were quiet weeping from some of the girls, and all of us were mentally straining, willing  him to reach out and take it, to be big John Dwyer again, not this frightening, frightened stranger.

    But he couldn't. He wanted to, I"m sure. He wanted to be our friend and mentor and role model again, but that ability was stolen from him by the hideous alchemy in his brain that stole him from us, stole him from himself. He shouted. He wept. He finally let go of my friend's arm, and ran off, jumped in his car and drove away, leaving a camp full of shell-shocked teenagers behind.
    We tried to resume the closing ceremony, but it was more painful than ever. I think everyone cried. After it was over, a bunch of us decided to stay up all night watch the sun rise. We built a campfire and huddled around it, talking for hours, trying to keep the darkness at bay. For the world was a much darker place that night.
     More monsters. Fewer stars.

    In the morning we were told that John's mother reported that he had successfully made it home that night and agreed to see a doctor. Like the kids we were, most of us breathed a sigh of relief and pretended that we thought it would be as simple as that, that prayer and a good doctor would fix what was broken.
    But of course it didn't.

     I never saw or heard of John again after that moment in 1974 when I watched the dust kicked up by his car as he raced out of our lives. I have thought of him with great affection from time to time and hoped he was doing well. But from what I've pieced together, mostly, he wasn't. He was hospitalized many times and was living in a group home right here in Columbus before he died. The obituary didn't mention any illness at all and I cannot help but wonder if he didn't end his own life, to escape his pain at last. But whether or not his illness caused his death, it certainly took his life. Years and years of it. It took his career, probably took from him the chance for a wife and family. It took him and never completely gave him back.
     So many beautiful hearts, dancing on broken glass, leaving footprints of pain behind them.

    And I can't help but wish that I had known he was so near. I would have liked to go to visit him. I'm sure it would have been very painful. I doubt he would have  remembered me, and who knows- maybe not even the place I knew him from. But I still wish I had known, so I could have reached out a hand, even if he could never have taken it.

 

    Next summer some of us are trying to arrange some sort of a camp reunion to get together with our fellow aging alumni from the deep woods of Vinton County and talk about the old days.
    I know, on that day, I will raise a glass and offer a toast to big John Dwyer, and to getting away from too many people so you can see the stars.

  
    

Posted by Tracy on Dec 29th 2011 | Filed in General | Comments (2)

Good Dog

     He was a houndish sort of a dog,  a sturdy, dependable mutt, his coat the color of sensible brown shoes. He trotted placidly alongside his owner as the man pushed a shopping cart filled with plastic bags over the rutted, half-frozen earth to the end of the freeway exit ramp.
One of those people.
      I contemplated the red light ahead of me and watched from the corner of my eye while the man began to root around in his cart for his battered cardboard sign. They were close enough now I could see that the dog's muzzle was mostly gray. His eyes were steady and calm, a demeanor that said he'd been here before, standing among the loud, smelly traffic in the deepening gloom of a winter afternoon , and knew he would be here again.
      I also saw that the sporty little red coat he wore had been fashioned out of parts of an old jacket carefully pinned in front and tied together under his belly.
 
      Some people say that you shouldn't give money to these freeway beggers- it encourages more to come, and they probably aren't really veterans/ homeless/parents like they claim but often I will slip one a dollar, particularly when the weather is foul and their raw, red fingers make my own ache or their gaze is just so empty of hope that i need to fill it with something. And anyway, it costs so little to believe in people, and deep inside, costs so much to ignore them.
      Careful not to telegraph my intentions because I had not yet made up my mind, I reached  into my purse on the seat next to me, slipped stealthy fingers into my wallet but discovered I had nothing smaller than a five dollar bill, started to close my wallet again.
      The dog sat down patiently next to his owner, Good dog who smoothed his hand lettered sign against his chest.
      "My dog and I need some help for food and rent" it said.

      I stared at the traffic light a moment longer  through the mist gathering on the windshield, considered that little red coat, so carefully constructed, pulled out the five dollar bill, rolled down my window and smiled. The man hurried over, aware that the light would change soon. In a soft drawl that recalled warmer places, he thanked me more than a mere $5 should ever warrant in America.
      "What's your dog's name?" I asked, leaned out the window to stroke the silky head and look into trusting, liquid eyes.
      "This is Rocky" the man said.
      "Well Merry Christmas to you and Rocky" I said as the light turned green and I pulled away eager to get home to start dinner, hoping to find time to decorate the Christmas tree tonight. I was feeling just a bit pleased with my own generosity- 5 dollars, after all!- and for treating that man like a person when so many others look away.

      It wasn't until I had gone 3 or 4 blocks that I realized I never even asked the man his name.

Posted by Tracy on Dec 16th 2011 | Filed in The Daily Rant | Comments (0)