In Search Of… Part Two-With Lost Loves
In Mind
By Bart Webber
“You know, Dad, the only good thing
that came out of the break-up with Moira was that I finally cooled the fire in
my head a little, finally gained a little peace. Funny it came through taking
up meditation which I used to laugh at when Moira would urge me to think about
doing it to relax my fevered head a bit. Used to call it just another one of
those New Age things that she was always touting as the next best cure for what
ailed humankind,” Dan Hawkins said to his uncomprehending father, Jethro, a man
he until a few years before he had been estranged from once the old man
divorced his late mother to run off with some floosy who left him flat and
broken, hearted and financially. They had only reconciled after his mother’s
funeral when it seemed that such mending needed doing. That incomprehension of
old Jethro about what Dan had just told him was nothing but the truth as the
old man was “old school,” had grown up in utter poverty in Riverdale, had done
his time in “Nam and had been and was proud of his service and exhibited all
the traits of those young men, white men,
who had come of age in the late 1950s and were unaffected, or claimed to
be unaffected, by all the bullshit, Jethro’s term, that passed for wisdom during
the counter-cultural 1960s. So his running off with some floosy, his heavy
drinking (and at one point drug use), his sense of Vietnam, my country right or
wrong, patriotism were all of a piece. All of piece that would make something
like meditation, something he had seen the Buddhists do in Vietnam while
good American like him were taking care
of the shit train that they had let their country fall into by ignoring the
“commies” until it was too late. If his wife, if his girlfriends of which he
had had many after that floosy slipped away with his dough and his balls, had
suggested that he take up meditation for what ailed him he would have shown,
had shown for lesser offenses than that, the back of his hand. (And Dan could
through a miserable childhood of merciless criticism, and back hands, testify
to the truth of that statement. A truth that contributed mightily to those many
years of estrangement between the two men.
“What the fuck are you talking about,
Dan? How the hell was whatever that meditation bullshit that ball-buster Moira
trying to lay on you going to help keep you to together when she wanted to run
the show, ’’ old Jethro answered back with that unknowing grin on his face that
what Dan should have done was given her his back hand, and maybe a couple of
good fucks and that would have stopped that noise.
“Dad, you can’t do that with women
anymore and you probably couldn’t even in your day and if you had tried to lay
a hand on Ma she would have left you high and dry way before you got tangled up
that floosy Susie that broke you. I don’t want to talk about that, okay. Just
hear me out with a word and maybe you can learn something for once,” Dan
responded plaintively. His father almost began to say something nasty but the
look in Dan’s eye told him to back off.
This is the way Dan’s old high school
friend, Rich Bruce, remembered what Dan had said to his father one night when
they were having dinner at Elmer’s Diner in old town Riverdale where Rich still
lived and Dan needed to confide in somebody about what he was trying to do to
be less distraught about Moira’s quick disappearance from his life.
Although at first Dan and Moira were
crazy in love like many twenty-somethings who were going through their first
serious love affairs right from the start there had been tensions, tensions
caused by Dan always being in overdrive as he was starting his career in law at
a major law firm, Dale, Dale, and Rutgers where the pressure was great to
perform or hit the bricks. Dan had met Moira one night at Jeff’s Grille, a
local hang-out for law students at Suffolk once they got over the grind of 1L
after he had taken his bar examination and needed to unwind. She was a last
year student at the Museum School of Art who was there with a girlfriend and he
had asked them if they wanted a drink to celebrate his “victory” since he
believed he had passed the damn thing on the basis of the written questions.
One thing led to another and they started dating and making plans, in the
meantime moved in together.
That’s when the heartache began, that’s
when that fire in Dan’s head led to many word fights and Moira’s first threats
that things were not working out and that she was leaving. In lieu of that, at
least for a while once Dan explained what pressures he was under from the
high-pressure law firm he was tied up with, Moira decided to start doing
meditation with Don Henderson, the locally famous Buddhist convert who ran
classes each week at the Boston Center for Adult Education. Moira admitted for
a while that doing her “meds” she called it helped to relieve the tensions
between them.
Just for a while though as she became more distraught at Dan’s
behavior, including a fear that he might strike he in a keyed-up moment. She
suggested to him that he might benefit from meditation. He blew off that suggestion,
laughed at her and said that if anybody he knew every found out that he was
doing such a New Age thing he would be laughed out of town.
Probably Dan’s response set something
off in Moira, he wasn’t sure if that was the moment when he had time to reflect
on what had happened after she packed her bags and left but it didn’t help. She
got moodier the more he got in that same condition, they made love less often
and not as tenderly as before, a sure sign that things were going downhill
fast. She would speak wistfully of having to find herself, having to see what
she was all about in this wicked old world (Dan’s term, not hers) and the
kicker, that she thought Dan’s frenzies were affecting her already delicate
health. That last part, the affecting her health part got Dan’s attention and
that was when he suggested the trip to Paris. She agreed.
The trip to Paris had been great, they
saw the museums, ate well, made love better than they had in a while and came
back refreshed. Or so Dan thought. A week later, perhaps seeing how great
things could be away the pressure-cooker of their lives together Moira lowered
the boomthe first time. Said she wanted out. Dan begged her not to go and the
only way he could placate her then was to succumb to her request that they go
into couples counselling. Dan had hated even the idea of that kind of thing
(and when he told his father about what she had asked him to do the old man
gave a look like wasn’t he just pussy-whipped). So they went to a counsellor in
Cambridge that Moira had heard of through New Age network and while Dan had
held his nose at first once he got into the sessions he told Moira that he was
in all the way, one hundred percent.
Those weekly sessions went on for the
better part of a year until he and Moira decided to take a week’s vacation to
Maine. That week was another great time for fun at the beach, eating out and
doing a few goofy things like playing miniature golf, going bowling, and going
to an old-fashioned outdoor drive-in theater. A week later Moira lowered the
final boom, packed her bags and left (that threatening to leave and leaving
after a great vacation had Dan thinking about Moira’s own psychological
problems but not much). Her argument was that like before she had to find herself,
see what she was about and still thought Dan was aggravating her medical
problems. She also told him in uncertain terms that he had better take stock of
himself, seek some help, maybe see Don about doing meditation or he would
become a human wreak.
Well Dan moped around for a while,
several weeks, thinking about where he had let the thing fall apart. Knew that
he had been responsible for a lot of what had gone wrong, had been an ass about
stuff. Then one day on the bulletin board at the law firm he saw a notice that
several institutions in Boston, including Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH)
were putting on a Hubweek, a week of social, physical, and medical therapy
workshops and lectures to let people calm down essentially. He noticed that one
workshop was being held at MGH with a Doctor Herbert Benson, a name he knew
from a book he had read that Moira had left around the apartment one thing when
she was looking for yet another New Age idea. This Doctor Benson had proof, had
done research, that practicing meditation would help your health or as Dan put
it put out the fire in his head, let him be at peace a little. So he went to
the workshop and the rest is history. He started doing that previously scorned
meditation. And he felt better, calmer.
Old man Jethro Hawkins’ reaction:WTF. Some things never change.
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