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RUDIMENTS 549.

RUDIMENTS, pt. 549
('of thee I sing')
I want to backtrack a little
here and remark some more
on my ocean-going vessel father.
Of whom I wrote about: the days
fishing, the fish, and the crabs, 
and the rowboats and the deep
sea and the outboard motors.
In the days around 1960, he 
was maybe 35-38 years old.
Full of energy and ready to
go. We would get to these
small spots of isolated beach
and sand that he knew of,
pitch the boat, and spend some 
time on these little beaches.
Perhaps I'd swim while he
surf-fished. As we did this,
most of the time there would
be five, six, ten other people
doing the same thing, or pretty
much the same. Some kids, lots
of adults. I made do with passing
the time as I would.
-
One day we were there, on one 
of these sand outposts, and among
the people fishing was a young
kid, a boy, maybe 12 or 14. I'm
just guessing. I still don't know
how it happened, in one of those
casting motions with the fishpole
and all, he snagged his own foot
as he cast, and the hook went
deep into the base of his foot.
The barbed hook. A barbed hook,
you may or may not know  -  as are
all fishing hooks  -  are made so as
to be difficult in extricating, as
that 'barb' on the hook's end is
made and designed so it will
not easily leave the pulp-body
it enters. The barb, besides 
keeping the hook in place, rips
and tears the offending tissue
on the way out. If you just pull
and tug, lots of damage can ensue.
This all sounds pretty cryptic and
dire, and perhaps it was  -  in any
case, this kid had gotten the hook
somehow set really good into the
flesh mass of the bottom of his foot.
-
A jumble ensued, of people
not sure what to do, gathering
around the kid in some sort of,
if not 'pain' then anxiety for sure,
over what had happened. I'm not
even sure where we were, and
I guess no one else either knew
the precise procedure for getting
help. Coast Guard, rescue, transport,
assistance, etc. In today's world,
I don't think this would ever any
more happen, but in 1960 apparently 
the wide-world of being was quite
different. In any case, no one gave
thought to liability, damages, law,
suing, etc. My father whipped 
out a belt knife, told the kid to
lie down, bite his (own) hand if
he had to, and he took the kid's
foot in his grip. With which
grip he (almost expertly, it 
seemed), began gouging and 
cutting into this kid's foot, and
long and well enough to unmask
and pull out the offending hook.
-
Balance need and process, please,
if you would. This youngster,
though now free of the hook, had
a deeply-carved cut and gouge in 
the base of his foot, along with
blood and the rest. The foot was
salt-water cleansed, and wrapped.
The kid was OK. My father was
thanked. The crisis moved on.
-
Oddly, this moment allowed me
a distance, a place outside of the
'action,' since I wasn't involved,
to watch all this take place. It was
all quite curious : I knew my
father's actions and ways and the
mannerisms by which he operated.
That was all normal. But to see
complete strangers having faith
enough for, or allowing, this 
sort of beachfront mini-surgery
was startling. I can remember
my father saying something like,
'Don't worry, salt water cures
everything. Make sure you keep
it in the surf here for a while.
Let it soak.' Pretty much that
was it. No exchanges of information,
identification, no police, or marine
police anyway, activity on scene.
Just a quick and almost cursory
attack at the problem with,
basically, the same gutting 
knife he used on fish. I don't
think any of this would have
happened today.
-
By the same token  - and from 
the complete other angle  -  I don't
think that anyone BUT my father
would have so heedlessly and in
a headstrong fashion, ventured 
into that situation. Knife-blade,
incision, cutting and gouging
like that. No second-thoughts,
no hesitation. I had to think,
was he foolish, unbound, crazy,
too giving, or just innocent? It's
just like a naive person to dive
into a situation such as this,
have the get get gangrene or an
infection, and be sued and brought
up on charges. Smashing headlong,
as it were, into the other realities
of people's angers and hesitation
and the sorts of stand-offish behavior
that did in, or had done in, for pity's
sake, a scant 5 or 6 years previous,
Kitty Genovese on the streets of
New York City. (If you don't
know the reference there, you can 
look it up. Let's call it 'bystander
indifference?').
-
Nothing more was much ever
said about this; which was another
weird thing that baffled me. I'm the
sort of person who, after something
like that, would have demanded info,
for follow-up and contact. I guess it's
just the way I go  -  but to my father
it just rolled right away into the
never-never land of never happened.
It's like, to me, seeing an avalanche
and never telling anyone  - all that
stuff rolling down a mountainside,
trees, homes and, possibly, people,
getting rolled over and smashed.
You sort of have to say something.
-
So, anyway, Life-lesson learned
right then and there. It did stay
with me, and has become one of
those watchword things by which
I run  -  beware naivete. Not quite
the same as the situation itself,
yet the lesson I drew from it has
always been to keep a slight remove
from others, others in bad scenes
or situations. Kitty Genovese
notwithstanding; it's always the
token naif who brings others into
their dangerous webs  -  infractions
and mistakes  -  by which the 'others'
in their zeal to help, or what they
think is help, get likewise implicated
or injured by entering another's scene.
The next thing they know, they're
on the other side of the witness stand,
looking out, being drawn deep into
some web of intrigue woven almost
psychotically by the seducer, the
problem-prone one who has suckered
them in. Learn to keep away, and
it's never worth it if you don't.
-
It sounds, perhaps, coarse and nasty,
but it's what life is made up of. One
simply has to develop discernment.
It's a personal matter. I remember
in elementary schools, #4 and #5,
having that ridiculous 'My Country
'Tis of Thee' song pounded into 
my head; we must have had to 
sing that five thousand times in 
those 6 years. Without thinking.
I look back now and realize it all 
as the web being woven, the
enticement of the psychosis of
others being used to drag us in  -
to what, for most of the boys there,
ended up as being the woven web
of inducement that ended up in
Pleiku or Hue. Sweet land of
Liberty. Of thee I sing.

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