memoir By
JEAN SHEPHERD
The male human animal, skulking through the impenetrable, fetid jungle
of kidhood, learns early in the game just what sort of animal he is.
The jungle he stalks is a howling tangled wilderness, infested with
crawling, flying, leaping, nameless dangers. There are occasional
brilliant patches of passionate orchids and other sweet flowers and
succulent fruits, but they are rare. He daily does battle with horrors
and emotions that he will spend the rest of his life trying to forget
or suppress. Or recapture.
His jungle is a
wilderness he will never fully escape, but those first early years,
when the bloom is on the peach and the milk teeth have just barely
departed, are the crucial days in the great education. I am not at all
sure that girls have even the slightest hint that there is such
a jungle. But no man is really qualified to say. Most wildernesses are
masculine, anyway.
And one thing that
must be said about a wilderness, in contrast to the supple silkiness
of civilization, is that the basic, primal elements of existence are
laid bare and raw. And can't be ducked. It is in this jungle that all
men find out about themselves. Things we all know, but rarely admit.
Say, for example, about that beady-eyed, clawed and ravening
carnivore, that incorrigibly wild, insane, scurrying little beast --
the killer that is in each of us. We pretend it isn't there most of
the time, but this is a silly, idle sham, as all male ex-kids know.
They have seen it and have run fleeing from it more than once.
Screaming into the night.
One quiet summer
afternoon, leafing through a nature book in the library, with the sun
slanting down on the oaken tables, I came across a picture of a
creature called the Tasmanian devil. He glared directly at me out of
the page, with an unwavering red-eyed gaze, and I have never forgotten
it. I was looking at my own soul!
The Tasmanian devil
is well named, being a nocturnal marsupial of extra-ordinary ferocity,
being strictly carnivorous, and, when cornered, fighting with a
nuttiness beyond all bounds of reason. In fact, it is said that he is
one of the few creatures on earth that actually looks forward
to being cornered.
I looked him in the
eye; he looked back, and even from the flat, glossy surface of the
paper I could feel his burning rage, a primal fury that glowed
white-hot like the core of a nuclear explosion. A chord of
understanding was struck between us. He knew and I knew. We were
killers. The only thing that separated us was the sham. He admitted
it, and I had been attempting to cover it up all of my life.
I remember well the
first time my own Tasmanian devil with out warning screamed out of the
darkness and revealed himself for what he was -- a fanged and maniacal
meat eater. Every male child sweats inside at a word that is rarely
heard today: bully. That is not to say that bullies no longer exist.
Sociologists have given them other and softer-sounding labels,
"overaggressive child," for example, but they all amount to
the same thing -- meatheads. Guys who grow up banging grilles in the
parking lots and becoming captains of industry or Mafia hatchet men.
Every school had at least five, and they usually gathered followers
and toadies like barnacles on the bottom of a garbage scow. The lines
were clearly drawn. You were either a bully, a toady, or one of the
nameless rabble of victims who hid behind hedges, continually ran up
alleys, ducked under porches, and tried to get a connection with city
hall -- city hall being the bully himself.
I was 13, and an
accomplished alley runner who wore sneakers to school not from choice
but to get off the mark quicker. I was well-qualified to endorse Keds
Champions with: "I have outrun some of the biggest bullies of my
time wearing Keds, and I am still here to tell the tale."
It would make a great
ad in Boys' Life: "KIDS! When that cold sweat pours down
your back and you are facing the moment of truth on the way home from
the store, don't you wish you had bought Keds? Yes, our new
Bully-Beater model has been endorsed by skinny kids with glasses from
coast to coast. That extra six feet may mean the difference between
making the porch and you-know-what!"
Many of us have grown
up wearing mental Keds and still ducking behind filing cabinets, water
coolers and into convenient men's rooms when that cold sweat trickles
down between the shoulder blades. My moment of truth was a kid named
Grover Dill.
What a rotten name!
Dill was a runny-nose type of bully. His nose was always
running, even when it wasn't. He was a yelling, wiry, malevolent,
sneevily snively bully who had quelled all insurgents for miles
around. I did not know one kid who was not afraid of Dill, mainly
because Dill was truly aggressive. This kind of aggression later in
life is often called "talent" or "drive," but to
the great formless herd of kids it just means a lot of running,
getting belted, and continually feeling ashamed.
If Dill so much as
said hi to you you felt great and warm inside. But mostly he just hit
you in the mouth. Now, a true bully is not a flash in the pan, and
Dill wasn't. This went on for years. I must have been in about second
grade when Dill first belted me behind the ear.
Maybe the terrain had
something to do with it. Life was very basic in northern Indiana, in a
steel town at the far southern tip of Lake Michigan. Life was more
primal there than in, say, New York City or New Jersey or California.
Take the seasons. Snow, ice, hard rocky frozen ground that wouldn't
thaw out until late June. Kids played baseball all winter on this
frozen lumpy tundra. Ground balls would come galloping: "K-tunk
K-tunk K-tunk K-tunk" over the arctic concrete. And then summer
would come. The ground would thaw and the wind would start, whistling
in off the lake, a hot Sahara gale. I lived the first ten years of my
life in a continual sandstorm. A sandstorm in the Dunes region, with
the temperature at 105 and no rain since the first of June, produces
in a kid the soul of a Death Valley prospector. The Indiana Dunes --
in those days no one thought they were special or spectacular -- they
were just the Dunes, all sand and swamps and timber wolves and even
rattlesnakes. There were also rattlesnakes in fifth grade: like Grover
Dill, a puff adder among garden worms.
This terrain grew
very basic kids who fought the elements all their lives. We'd go to
school in a sandstorm and come home just before a tornado. Lake
Michigan is like an enormous flue that stretches all the way up into
the Straits of Mackinac, into the great north woods of Canada, and the
wind howls down that lake like a gigantic chimney. We lived at the
bottom of this immense stovepipe. The wind hardly ever stops. Winter,
spring, summer, fall -- whatever weather we had was made 20 times
worse by the wind. If it was warm, it seared you like the open door of
a blast furnace. If it was cold, the wind sliced you to little pieces,
diced and cubed you, ground you up, then put you back together and
started all over again. People had red faces all year round from the
wind.
When the sand is blowing off the Dunes in the summer it does
something to the temper. The sand gets in your shoes and always hurts
between the toes. The kids would cut the sides of their sneakers so
that when the sand would get to be too much, you just stick your foot
up in the air and the sand would squirt out and you're ready for
another ten minutes of action.
Grover Dill was just another of the hostile elements of nature,
like the sand, the wind -- and the stickers. Northern Indiana has a
strange little green bur that has festered in fingers and ankles for
countless centuries. One of the great moments in life for a kid was to
catch a fly ball covered with a thick fur of stickers in a barehand
grab, driving them in right to the marrow of the knuckle bones.
One day, without warning of any kind, it happened. Monumental
moments in our lives are rarely telegraphed. I am coming home from
school on a hot, shimmering day, totally unaware that I was about to
meet face to face my Tasmanian devil, that clawed, raging maniac that
lurks inside each of us. There were three or four of us eddying along,
blown like leaves through vacant lots, sticker patches, asphalt
streets, steaming cindered alleys, wading through great clouds of
Indiana grasshoppers, big dark-green ones that spat tobacco juice on
your kneecaps and hollered and yelled in the weeds on all sides. The
eternal locusts were shrieking in the poplars and the monarch
butterflies were on the wing amid the thistles. In short, it was a day
like any other.
My kid brother is with me and we have one of those little running
ball games going, where you bat the ball with your hand back and forth
to each other, moving homeward at the same time. The ball hops along;
you field it; you throw it back; somebody tosses it; it's grabbed on
the first bounce, you're out, but nobody stops moving homeward. A
moving ball game. Like a floating crap game.
We were about a block or so from my house, bouncing the ball over
the concrete, when it happened. We are moving along over the sandy
landscape, under the dark lowering clouds of open-hearth haze that
always hung between us and the sun. I dart to my right to field a
ground ball. A foot lashes out unexpectedly and down I go, flat on my
face on the concrete road. I hit hard and jarring, a bruising,
scraping jolt that cut my lip and drew blood. Stunned for a second, I
look up. It is the dreaded Dill!
To this day I have no idea how he materialized out of nowhere to
trip me flat and to finally force the issue.
"Come on, kid, get out of the way, willya?" He grabs the
ball and whistles off to one of his toadies. He had yellow eyes. So
help me God, yellow eyes!
I got up with my knees bleeding and my hands stunned and tingling
from the concrete, and without any conception at all of what I was
doing I screamed and rushed. My mind was a total red, raging flaming
blank. I know I screamed.
"YAAAAAAHHHH!"
The next thing I knew we are rolling over and over on the concrete,
screaming and clawing. I'm out of my skull! I am pounding Dill against
the concrete and we're rolling over and over, battering at each
other's faces. I was screaming continually. I couldn't stop. I hit him
over and over in the eyes. He rolled over me but I was kicking and
clawing, gouging, biting, tearing. I was vaguely conscious of people
coming out of houses and across lawns. I was on top. I grabbed at his
head. I caught both of Grover Dill's ears in either hand and I began
to pound him on the concrete, over and over again.
I have since heard of people under extreme duress speaking in
strange tongues. I became conscious that a steady torrent of
obscenities and swearing was pouring out of me as I screamed. I could
hear my brother running home, hysterically yelling for my mother, but
only dimly. All I knew is that I was tearing and ripping and smashing
at Grover Dill, who fought back like a fiend! But I guess it was the
first time he had ever met face to face with an unleashed Tasmanian
devil.
I continued to swear fantastically. I was conscious of it, and yet
it was as though it was coming from something or someone outside of
me. I swore as I have never sworn since as we rolled screaming on the
ground. And suddenly we were pulled apart. Dill, the back of his head
all battered, his eyes puffed and streaming, slashed by my claws and
fangs, was hysterical. There was hardly a scratch on me, except for my
scraped knees.
I learned then that bravery does not exist. Just a kind of latent
insanity. If I had thought about attacking Dill for the seconds before
I had done it, I'd have been four blocks away in a minute flat. But
something had happened. A fuse had blown. And I had gone out of my
skull.
But I had sworn! Terribly! Obscenely! In our house you didn't
swear. The thing I called Dill I'm sure my mother had not even heard
before. And I had only heard them once or twice, coming out of
an alley. I had woven a tapestry of obscenity that as far as I know is
still hanging in space over Lake Michigan. And my mother had heard!
Dill by this time is wailing hysterically. This had never happened
to him before. They're dragging the two of us apart amid a great ring
of surging grownups and exultant, scared kids who knew more about what
was happening than the mothers and fathers ever would. My mother is
looking at me. She said: "What did you say?" That's all.
There was a funny look on her face.
At that instant all thought of Grover Dill disappeared from what
was left of my mind and all I could think of was the incredible shame
of that unbelievable tornado of obscenity I had sprayed all over the
neighborhood.
I go into the house in a daze, and my mother's putting water on me
in the bathroom, pouring it over my head and dabbing my eyes, which
are puffed and red from hysteria. My kid brother is cowering under the
dining-room table, scared. Bruner, next door, had been hiding in the
basement, under the steps, scared. The whole neighborhood is scared,
and so am I. The water trickles down over my hair and around my ears
as I stare into the swirling drainage hole in the sink.
"You better go in and lie down on the day bed. Take it easy.
Just go in and lie down."
She takes me by the shoulder and pushes me down on the day bed. I
lie there scared, really scared of what I have done. I felt no sense
of victory, no sense of beating Dill. All I felt was this terrible
thing I had said and done.
The light was getting purple and soft outside, almost time for my
father to come home from work. I'm just lying there. I can see that
it's getting dark, and I know that he's on his way home. Once in a
while a gigantic sob would come out, half hysterically. My kid brother
by now is under the sink in the john, hiding among the mops, mewing
occasionally.
I hear the car roar up the driveway and a wave of terror breaks
over me, the terror that a kid feels when he knows that retribution is
about to be meted out for something that he's been hiding forever: his
rottenness. The basic rottenness has been uncovered, and now it's the
wrath of God, which you are not only going to get, but which you
deserve!
I hear him in the kitchen now. I'm in the front bedroom, cowering
on the day bed. The normal sounds -- he's hollering around with the
newspaper. Finally my mother says: "Come on, supper's ready. Come
on, kids, wash up."
I painfully drag myself off the day bed and sneak along the
woodwork, under the buffet, skulking into the bathroom. My kid brother
and I wash together over the sink. He says nothing.
Then I am sitting at the kitchen table, toying with the red
cabbage. My old man says: "Well, what happened today?" and
looks up from the sports page. Here it comes!
There is a short pause, and then my mother says: "Oh, not
much. Jean had a little fight."
"Fight? What kind of fight!"
She says: "Oh, you know how kids are."
The ax is poised over my naked neck! There is no way out!
Mechanically I continue to shovel in the mashed potatoes and red
cabbage and meat loaf. But I am tasting nothing, just eating and
eating.
"Oh, it wasn't much. I gave him a talking to. By the way, I
see the White Sox won today...."
About two thirds of the way through the meal I slowly began to realize
that I was not about to be destroyed. And then a very peculiar thing
happened. A sudden cramp hit me so bad I could feel my shoes coming
right up through my ears.
I rushed back into the bathroom, so sick to my stomach that my
knees were buckling. It was all coming up, pouring out of me, the
conglomeration of it all. The terror of Grover Dill, the fear of
yelling the things that I had yelled, my father coming home, my
obscenities -- I heaved it all out. It poured out of me in great
heaving rushes, splattering the walls, the floor, the sink. Old
erasers that I had eaten years before, library paste that I had downed
in second grade, an Indian-head penny that I had gulped when I was
two! It all came up in the thunderous, retching heaves.
My father hovered out in the hall, saying: "What's the matter
with him? What's the matter? Let's call Doctor Slicker!"
My mother knew what was the matter with me.
"Now, he's going to be all right. Just take it easy. Go back
and finish eating. Go on."
She pressed a washrag to the back of my neck. "Now, take it
easy. I'm not going to say anything. Just be quiet. Take it
easy."
Down comes the bottle of Pepto-Bismol and the spoon. "Take
this. Stop crying."
But then I really started to cry, yelling and blubbering.
She was talking low and quiet to me.
"We'll tell him your stomach is upset, that you ate something
at school."
The Pepto-Bismol slides down my throat, amid my blubbering. Now
it's really coming out! I'm scared of Grover Dill again, scared of
everything. I'm convinced that I will never grow up to be 21, that I'm
going blind!
I'm lying in bed, sobbing, but I finally drift off to sleep,
completely passed out from sheer nervous exhaustion. The soft warm air
blew the curtains back and forth as we caught the tail of a breeze
from the great north woods, from the wilderness at the head of the
lake. Both of us slept quietly, me and my red-eyed, fanged, furry
little Tasmanian devil. Both of us slept. For the time being.
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