More of My Lurid Past and Other Sordid Tales

 

When I left—I never graduated—Brookhaven, Mississippi’s high school in 1967, I had to choose between college and Vietnam. Happily, a tiny, local Methodist college called Whitworth offered me a scholarship. To say the least, I was surprised because in high school I had been… a disciplinary problem… skipped school regularly… failed to complete assignments… spent four summers in summer school in order to pass the classes I flunked in regular school… wasted two years in the tenth grade … believed my parents and teachers regarded me as mildly retarded… and got so drunk on weekends that I didn’t know where I had been or what I had done, although I was usually the one who drove.

Despite my failure to graduate from high school, my years in summer school enabled me to accumulate enough credits for college. But why would any college—even a tiny college like Whitworth—offer me a scholarship? Given that Whitworth
was regarded as an academic joke, I might have been the only one to apply, but it’s also possible that Whitworth was impressed by the fact that I had aced their introductory psychology course while still in high school (I took the course in the hope of getting my head together). In any event, Whitworth had promised to give one scholarship to a country school kid and one to a “city” school kid, so they had to choose someone from Brookhaven (population 11,500), and that someone was me. Their country recipient was a valedictorian named Beau, and after devoting a long paragraph to his illustrious school career, the newspaper ended with a single sentence stating that I showed “promise.”

I loved Whitworth because it had many times the number of course options that BHS offered; because I was able to make a new start among people I hadn’t known for twelve years; and because I had teachers who encouraged me. One such teacher administered an IQ test on which I scored 160, and so it was that I immediately went to thinking I was mildly retarded to regarding myself as fucking brilliant. During my time at Whitworth, I held various jobs: stock clerk at Woolworth
’s; morticians assistant at a local funeral home; ambulance driver; plus my father and I ran a daily 115-mile paper route.

The only big cloud on the horizon was that I had to keep changing my major in order to maintain my draft deferment, so I knew the day might come when no major would save me. A lesser problem was that Whitworth lacked regional accreditation. 

Meanwhile…

Peggy was an Air Force brat with Mississippi roots and a Mississippi birth certificate, but who vowed she would never live in Mississippi. Unfortunately, her very religious parents shipped her off to Mississippi College, a female-virginity-obsessed Southern Baptist institution near Jackson where she studied education, math, and science. She had been there three years when I transferred up from Whitworth and my roommate, Lynn Taylor introduced me to her as his date. By then, I had been ogling her from across the cafeteria for months, so I asked Lynn if he minded me asking her out. He said no, but he later told her to turn me down, thereby giving her added incentive to go out with me. 

When school ended three dates later, Peggy took a Greyhound to her parents’ home in San Antonio, and I left with an acquaintance for his home in Alberta, Canada. I couldn’t get Peggy out of my mind, so I got out of the car in Colorado and hitchhiked down to San Antonio to ask her to marry me. She and her family were greatly surprised by my midnight call from a nearby truckstop, but by the time I left San Antonio three days later, we were engaged. I felt duty-bound to formally ask her Lieutenant Colonel father for her hand, but she said she would break the news after I left. We married five months later. December 19th will mark our 50th anniversary.

After four years in college, I graduated in 1971 with five year’s worth of credits and a degree in elementary education (Peggy’s degree was in biology with minors in chemistry and secondary education). I had named that as my major in order to avoid the draft, not because I had the least interest in teaching. And so it was that I, in turn, drove an ambulance, worked as an inhalation therapy technician at the University of Mississippi Medical Center, and then as a funeral director at Mississippi’s largest funeral home. 

By this time, a draft lottery had been instituted, and my number was low enough that I would have been taken had my doctor not written the Army a letter stating that I had recently passed six kidney stones. This was news to me, but I happily accepted the yearlong deferment. By the time the year was up, the war was winding down, and my number was just high enough to keep me from being drafted. Because I still had no career goal, I joined the Air Force for the simple reason that Peggy’s father, Earl, liked it. He even pulled strings so the Air Force would send me back to college to study meteorology. Sadly, three weeks into boot camp, I was discharged from the Air Force for smoking pot. Earl never showed his disappointment.

It was now 1973, and having nothing better to do, I returned to Brookhaven and got a teaching job. Four years later, I quit teaching when the administration objected to a beard I grew during summer vacation. My black principal said I looked like a militant, while his two white bosses (both of whom had spanked me when I was a student) thought I looked like a hippie. They said I would be promoted to administration if I shaved, but could be fired if I refused. I confided in my ACLU-affiliated doctor who promised me the group’s support, but I would have kept my beard regardless. As things turned out, I wasn’t fired, but I clearly wasn
’t wanted, so I quit at the end of the school year. And so it was that my carpenter father gave me seven acres of Mississippi woodland, and helped me build a house that had been designed as a ski lodge. When it was completed, he and I went to work in residential and commercial property maintenance.

Peggy had never lived anywhere that wasn’t temporary, and the house that my father and I built for her—with such help as she could offer on weekends—was her dream home. Almost from day one, I felt trapped, but I couldn’t bring myself to tell her, so I instead tried to make things work by turning our land into a second Eden. I also looked for escape in whatever drugs I could find and in sex with other women. Older married men had told me that finding women—married or single—was easy, and they were right. Few such women were looking for a committed relationship—although some tried to lure me away from Peggy—so as near as I could tell they had sex with me because they were bored, enjoyed the risk, needed to be told they were beautiful, wanted secret vengeance against controlling husbands, or liked the excitement of new partners. One night, Peggy dreamed that I kept calling her by the names of other women, yet I had been having sex with many more women than she knew about. (We had an open marriage by then, but as often happens with such arrangements, it was my idea, and I had sex with a lot more people than she did.)

Then came the day that I knew sex, drugs, and the creation of a second Eden would never be enough, and with this thought came the realization that I had rather be dead than spend the rest of my life in Mississippi. Various things precipitated this. (1) The older I got, the more I regarded myself as smarter and more interesting than my friends, and I wrongly imagined that I would find superior people elsewhere. (2) As I became more liberal and less religious, I increasingly felt that I didn’t belong among people who held opposing values. (3) The incident that occurred during jury duty when I was struck on the head for not standing for prayer (see last post). (4) The restaurant scene in the movie Easy Rider, a scene that was shot just across the Mississippi River in Louisiana. The malevolent diners had been local residents, and the movie’s main characters (Fonda, Nicholson, and Hopper) later spoke of the frighteningly real hatred that they felt from those diners. I recognized my neighbors in those extras, and came to envision myself as living in a hell populated by redneck demons. 

Still, I did my best so Peggy wouldn’t have to leave her home. I got a pilot’s license so I could have ready access to other places, but the only plane I could afford was old and slow. I vainly looked for friends in the ads’ section of the Mother Earth News and other alternative magazines. Peggy and I traveled for two months a year, but the day always came when we had to turn the truck in the direction of Mississippi. I joined the Mississippi ACLU (American Civil Liberties Union) and the Mississippi Native Plant Society in the hope of finding people with whom I had common interests, but only one friendship came out of either group and he left the state as an escaped felon (my friends were usually as lost as myself). I took up canoeing, but even as I tried to lose myself in the beauty of Southern streams, I was haunted by the theme from Easy Rider:

“The river flows, flows to the sea.
Where ever that river goes that’s where I want to be.
Flow river flow, let your waters wash down.
Take me from this road to some other town.
  

To be continued...

22 comments:

Anonymous said...

Everyone's past is interesting. Yours seems extra interesting.

angela said...

You have lived a very exciting life
I was born in 1967 and my parents were very very strict
No way could I have had any fun
So it was great that my husband knew I needed be be young when I was still young and was ok with me
Going out with my friends and enjoying myself.

kylie said...

I dont think I knew you were a teacher and I think it was only recently I caught up on the pilots licence. You're a smart man. Do you think you were a bit delinquint as a young man because you were bored?

Snowbrush said...

"Everyone's past is interesting. Yours seems extra interesting."

Thanks, I guess.

"So it was great that my husband knew I needed be be young when I was still young and was ok with me going out with my friends and enjoying myself."

Sounds like you married well.

"You're a smart man."

I feel ever less that way due to age and pain. For example, I don't retain information well, and writing well is becoming increasingly difficult.

"Do you think you were a bit delinquint as a young man because you were bored?"

I had friends who I enjoyed, and I usually had a job, so, no, I wasn't bored. I just needed guidance and support, but what I got in its place was the conviction that no one believed in me.

The Blog Fodder said...

Congratulations on almost 50 years. An accomplishment as long as you are both happy to be together now.

Ruby End said...

"and so it was that I immediately went to thinking I was mildly retarded to regarding myself as fucking brilliant." - Hahahahahahahahahaha, oh this made me laugh loudly. Superbly dry. I'll be back with a longer comment tomorrow as it is bedtime here. Clever clogs indeed. X

mimmylynn said...

Your life story is fascinating. I await more. It is early but I wish you and Peggy Happy Anniversary.

Snowbrush said...

"Congratulations on almost 50 years. An accomplishment as long as you are both happy to be together now."

Maybe it would be an even greater accomplishment if we hated one another's guts but refused to give up. Have you heard the joke about the old lady who divorced her husband after 60-years? When someone asked her why on earth she had waited to long, she said, "Enough is enough."

"I'll be back with a longer comment tomorrow as it is bedtime here."

It is now 8:00 p.m. "tomorrow," but as of yet no "longer comment." If I don't hear from you soon, I'll be going straight to Boris Johnson, and while I don't know exactly what he might do, it will probably be really stupid, so why take the risk.

"Your life story is fascinating. I await more."

I am touched by your interest and praise. Thank you.

"It is early but I wish you and Peggy Happy Anniversary."

Well, by golly, why wait when we could all be dead tomorrow? Besides that, I'll always remember you as being the first to congratulate us.

Snowbrush said...

Mimmylynn, I just noted that Andrew congratulated us four hours sooner than you, but since his congratulations weren't exactly full-throated ("An accomplishment as long as you are both happy to be together now."), I didn't quite know what to make of them. On that point, though, I've found that problems within my marriage are like problems within myself in that they never go away; they simply change.

Winifred said...

I never cease to be amazed at your life story Snow, I've led a very sheltered life in comparison. I look forward to the next episode.

Meanwhile happy golden wedding to you both, not everyone succeeds in achieving that milestone. Congratulations!!!!

The Blog Fodder said...

Maybe it would be an even greater accomplishment if we hated one another's guts but refused to give up.

I consider that a failure on one or both persons part. Long marriages are fine if they are happy but no one outside the marriage knows for sure. Too many marriages last only because one person disappears as an individual and subsumes themselves in their spouse. My parents marriage was like that. My mother should have left him early on but religion says stay and where would she go in the early 50s?

After reading in the last few posts about your "marriage", which I do not understand in the least, not that that is important, I was just curious. The first years sounded pretty rough and still you are together. So did one mellow or the other simply give up? What is a good marriage? What is a bad marriage? Is there an average marriage? I have no idea.

Snowbrush said...

Winifred, I'm so glad that my two recent posts have pleased you.

Me; "Maybe it would be an even greater accomplishment if we hated one another's guts but refused to give up."

Blog Fodder: "I consider that a failure on one or both persons part. Long marriages are fine if they are happy..."

I was making an apparently lame attempt at humor, but now I'll be serious. If I am understanding you correctly, you hold happiness to be the most important value in a marriage, a value that, compared to which other values are secondary. I see things differently in that I regard happiness as transient and mood-based, and in no way to be held in greater esteem than love, joy, devotion, loyalty, delight, worship, commitment, fascination, and sacrifice (for all I know, you might feel the same, but I'm going by what you said and not trying to figure things out that you didn't say). I have a friend--he was my college roommate and the best man at my wedding. I was also the best man at his wedding. His wife (who was Peggy's best friend and roommate) is dying of brain cancer. Is he happy? No, but it doesn't matter because she is his life, so much so that I don't know if he will survive her death--I have doubts that I would survive Peggy's death. I've also known people like my parents who stayed together, not because they were happy, but because they wanted to give their children a stable, two-parent home. I've also known people who devoted years to caring for a spouse who had Alzheimers, and they certainly weren't happy. To be sure, I don't respect a woman--usually--who stays married to a man who beats her, that is unless she is truly trapped for one reason or another, and I wouldn't fault someone for divorcing a hardcore drunk. How about adultery--I sure did a lot of that? Peggy never considered leaving me over adultery--and we did have an open marriage--but she did consider leaving me over drugs. When she told me about about this years later, I was astounded because, at the time, the only drug I used frequently was pot, and I even gave that up when the cost of a lid passed $15. To me, the pot I used was harmless (especially compared to speed, liquor, cocaine, etc.), and I felt that my use of it allowed me to grow as a person because it opened me to beauty more deeply than anything I had previously experienced. In her view, these things didn't matter because the possession of any amount of pot was a felony. She had a point, but instead of bowing to such a silly law, I thought that the only proper response was to scorn it.

"The first years sounded pretty rough and still you are together. So did one mellow or the other simply give up? What is a good marriage? What is a bad marriage? Is there an average marriage? I have no idea."

Things that were once a problem stopped being a problem (for instance, I no longer have the least desire for other women--although I often lust after a breed of cat called a Turkish Angora), and things that weren't a problem have become a problem (age-related limitations for one). Sometimes, we have lovely days, and sometimes we have hellacious days. No doubt a lot of women would have dumped me long ago, but then Peggy has her own problems that some men might have dumped her for. The fact is that I'm far less likely to write about her limitations than I am my own because I don't think it would be fair to do so. She reads my every post, but only once in all these years has she asked me not to put something online, and that was because I had criticized Islam (which is a religion that I despise), and she worried that some nutjob would show up and kill us. I acceded to her request because it would be absurd for me to place greater value upon a post than upon her right to personal safety, and in this instance I thought her fears might be rational.

kj said...

Hello Snow, here I am, back and learning more about you. For what it's worth, I don't see one inch of decline in your intelligence or your writing.

I had no idea you were once a Fneral Director.

I can't exactly tell if you are content, or not. I see that as different from happy. You probably know I've had back surgery, finally, and it's been pretty successful. I can walk a mile which is a big deal for me.

I have a goodly amount of your prier posts to catch up on. My relationship with the blogs is still iffy. But also loved.
Take care,
love
kj

The Blog Fodder said...

Thank you for your explanation. It is the best answer to my questions I have ever had. I will copy it and keep it to reread. When my late wife was dying of cancer she was in a wheelchair. I would cheerfully have pushed that chair for the next 30 years if I could have. She finally needed me.

The Blog Fodder said...

Not sure of how you define happiness but your description of what makes a good marriage is certainly how I would define happiness.

Snowbrush said...

"Hello Snow, here I am, back and learning more about you."

This makes me very, very happy. I had thought that you were someone who had abandoned Blogspot for Facebook.

"For what it's worth, I don't see one inch of decline in your intelligence or your writing."

Thank you, but I know my memory is going, and I know I have to work many times harder to make my posts as interesting as I want them to be.

"I had no idea you were once a Funeral Director."

I worked at three funeral homes over the years (along with two ambulance services and two hospitals), but I couldn't list everything I've done without my post becoming tedious.

"I can't exactly tell if you are content, or not."

No, I'm not content (being in daily back pain and anticipating every coming day as finding me more mentally and physically limited than the previous day), but I have meaningful compensations--a loyal wife, a comfortable home, no health problems that are likely to kill me, and five cats that I worship, adore, and jump with glee at the very sight of.

"You probably know I've had back surgery, finally, and it's been pretty successful. I can walk a mile which is a big deal for me."

I know of your struggles and of your successful surgery. About eight years ago, Peggy's back hurt her so much that I don't know how she could have continued to live had her surgery not been successful. When, upon her first visit to the surgeon, Carmina Angeles, she told Carmina that she was "probably just being a woos" (being a woos is a major fear of Peggy's), Carmina said, "I've seen strong men with your problem sit before me in tears and plead for help, and I've seen women like you literally crawl through the door begging for immediate surgery, so, no, you're not being a woos for sitting quietly and telling me you're in pain.'"

I have a goodly amount of your prior posts to catch up on."

I am honored. I always liked you, found your life interesting, and I've missed you during your absence.

Snowbrush said...

"Thank you for your explanation. It is the best answer to my questions I have ever had."

Thank you.

"When my late wife was dying of cancer she was in a wheelchair. I would cheerfully have pushed that chair for the next 30 years if I could have. She finally needed me."
Now THAT'S something I would like to read a post--or a succession of posts. Seriously. I have no idea if you would feel comfortable writing about your experience, but I would very much like to learn of it... The woman who I said was dying of brain cancer has finally become so sick that she chose to end chemotherapy and radiation therapy. She had only agreed to treatment (she only has months to live no matter what she does) because she feared that her husband couldn't survive without her. Yet on the outside, he was the one who radiated strength and self-confidence, whereas she often seemed timid and uncertain, at least when she was young--I have rarely seen her since then.

I don't know which gender has a greater need to be needed, but I think it might be the male gender because we are the ones who are cast in the role of protector, but what good is a protector who has nothing to protect... I know that I greatly need Peggy to regard me as strong, skilled, and competent, but as age and pain continue to rob me of these things, I feel increasingly humiliated. As for the friends I mentioned, here is an interesting quote: "A 2014 study published in the Journal of Public Health found that people whose spouses had just died had a 66% increased chance of dying within the first three months following their spouse's death. Prior studies had placed the increased chances of death for the surviving spouse even higher, at up to 90%."

To my surprise, the study showed no significant difference between men and women, my belief having been that women are far more likely to survive the death of a spouse: https://www.verywellmind.com/surviving-widowhood-4011236

"Not sure of how you define happiness but your description of what makes a good marriage is certainly how I would define happiness."

No doubt, a great many disagreements occur because person "A" wrongly assumes that s/he and person "B" defines a word in the same way, ours being a case in point. I define happiness as a passing mood rather than a state of being. KJ (see above) emphasized contentment over happiness, and I agree--I would even say that they are the same. Happiness is bubbly and exuberant. Joy is quiet and peaceful. Happiness is petting someone else's cat; joy is having my own cat to pet. Happiness is--or was--going out with someone new; joy is having Peggy to go out with. Happiness lasts for minutes, hours, or days; joy lasts for years.

Marion said...

Funny, I'm smarter than anyone I know, too. Unfortunately, the only Zen we find on the mountaintop is the Zen we brought with us. xo

Book recommendation: "12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos" by Dr. Jordan B. Peterson

Snowbrush said...

"Funny, I'm smarter than anyone I know, too."

Then you're smarter than yourself, and this means that you're not the smartest after all. I had thought better of you than this.

"...the only Zen we find on the mountaintop is the Zen we brought with us."

Id change is impossible, why recommend a book based upon the belief that change is possible? ("Book recommendation: '12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos.'")



ellen abbott said...

I'm late reading this and I'm here now because of your next post and I wanted to catch up. That said I intended to read it all along but, you know, life happens. Anyway. Fun reading about your life. There's so much more to people and their lives than we know. Witness my most recent post though I have blogged about it before, few of my current readers are aware of it.

So, you got kicked out of the Air Force for smoking pot. I got kicked out of my first college for smoking pot. It was a bad choice on my part and a very bad fit. I didn't realize when I decided on Trinity that it was a very conservative college and I began my counterculture and hippie ways two years previous, I ignored the rules and conventions, wore pant on upper campus (women were supposed to wear dresses only on upper campus). They slowly kicked out all my friends save for the couple of upperclassmen who for some reason befriended me. Couldn't catch me smoking pot so they had to set me up.

I agree with your assessment on long term marriages, happiness is temporary and there are so many other values that makes one work. My first husband wanted an open marriage and since I had only married him to get out from my father's thumb and out of his house I didn't really care since I had no intention of staying married to him. He was a real jackass...drug addict, wouldn't work, just an all round lazy entitled motherfucker, had to confess all his extramarital excursions which I'd just as soon he kept to himself but when I ventured out, well that was a different story and he would lay into me with lots of angry verbal abuse. That marriage lasted 3 ½ years and all my friends went with it so I can just imagine all the bullshit he laid on them. Not a one ever tried to find out my side so no great loss. My current marriage is going on 46 years (and not an open marriage as sexual loyalty was binding and besides we had a great sex life). We've had tough times but at this point it's a comfortable relationship.

Frog Fart said...

\\(1) The older I got, the more I regarded myself as smarter and more interesting than my friends, and I wrongly imagined that I would find superior people elsewhere.

Oh. Thankfully. I was cured of that delusion early enough.
Well, more like I never thought about oneself as superior. Well, have had no reasons, probably. Cultural differences. Different times.

Well, cure was pecular too -- when I came into university, where I thought smart people might be, I met only crackpot professor and utter mediocrity around him, which doesn't care about him being crackpot.

Well, I still trying to find that "superior people... is out there"(ref to a X-Files famous motto it is). While roaming/lurking through Internet.



\\\\Blogger Marion said...
\\\\Funny, I'm smarter than anyone I know, too.
\\Blogger Snowbrush said...
\\"Funny, I'm smarter than anyone I know, too."
\\Then you're smarter than yourself, and this means that you're not the smartest after all. I had thought better of you than this.

BULLS EYE.
If one is so carefree to say something like that "I'm smarter", it means nothing else as that, that that one do not embode a minimum capability of understanding what "smartness" is about. :)))
"I know that I know nothing"... for the very least, can count as rite of passage to a smartassness.
Though that'll be only for green trainees. ;)



\\I just needed guidance and support, but what I got in its place was the conviction that no one believed in me.

Yeah.


\\...sometimes we have hellacious days.

what a word. tnx for providing it.



\\because I had criticized Islam (which is a religion that I despise),

That means only that you know nothing about Eastern Orthodoxy shamelessly calling itself "christianic". :))))

Islam is just regular paganism in comparision.



\\To my surprise, the study showed no significant difference between men and women, my belief having been that women are far more likely to survive the death of a spouse:

That is because of their statisticly relatively longer lifespan I think.



Sue said...

"very sheltered life?" Could be a blessing, from the Holy Spirit, Himself :)