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EXCERPT FROM THE BOOK:
MOST PEOPLE TALK BULLSHIT
- One Primate's Search For Intelligent Life
Wrestling Also Causes a
Rift Between Jake and Me
Jake, the former Marine and my Mother’s current love interest
was intrigued that I had joined the wrestling team. He was
twenty-four at the time (he was six or seven years younger than
my mother).
At the
time he weighed a slim trim one hundred and fifty pounds at five
foot seven inches in height. He was not a big man, nor was he
robust like his brother… however, he had a temper and drive that
sometimes imbued him with vicious strength.
I wrestled varsity at the ninety-eight pound class. Jake, in a
fit of big brother or fatherly type of roughhousing to bond with
me… suddenly grabbed me and gleefully said he wanted to see how
good of a wrestler I was.
Memories of my own father’s disappointment of my dismal past
athletic performance, compelled me to put out superhuman effort
so the my mother’s new love interest would not see me in the
same lackluster light that was the cause of my own father’s
shame. My efforts were not fruitless and in fact I quickly had
Jake on his back and pinned.
As he
struggled I was determined all the more to earn his love or at
least his admiration holding him helpless to eradicate himself
from my grip.
He became very angry and started cursing… demanding that I let
him up immediately. His tone of voice filled me with fear and
hurt, although for what reason, I could not fathom. Jake got up
and tersely made an excuse as to why he had to leave. I was
afraid that somehow I ruined the relationship between him and my
mother. I was confused as to what had happened. I knew it was
something horrible and I knew that instead of admiration or at
least acceptance, Jake would at one level, forever hold me at
arms length.
I was not sophisticated enough at the time to understand that to
win in life, you have to be sharp enough to let people beat you…
but only just enough so that you can still maintain their
respect.
It
would be years before I fully realized it was on that day… I
crossed the line. I unintentionally hurt his pride of manly
competence and what made the offense worse was that I did it as
an almost thirteen year old one hundred pound kid just beginning
to feel the effects of puberty.
There were two other occasions to cement these hard feelings if
the first had not been enough. Two years after our wrestling
bout, someone had bought my brother and I a set of boxing
gloves. Jake decided to take it upon himself to teach James the
fine art of boxing. James was eleven and I was fourteen and a
husky one hundred and forty-five pounds.
After Jake easily kept control over James, he decided to see
what I could do.
I
could tell he was tentative, but this would be different than
wrestling; with boxing I was totally unskilled and
inexperienced. Jake wanted us to really go at it, but he
emphasized that we pull our punches; since he readily
acknowledge that both of us were big enough to hurt each other.
The specter of my real father shaming my pitiful and
disappointing non-athletic attempts when I was younger haunted
me once again. A non-thinking needy part of me that craved
acceptance and love from a father geared me into over-drive.
Within a minute, after peppering his body and face, (lightly)
without being touched by him… he emphatically demanded that the
bout was finished.
I was
uncertain at the time, but in retrospect I realize he was once
again put out by my efforts.
The third time was a year later, when Jake wanted to race me in
a sprint and the intimation was to see if I somehow measured up
to his expectations. He even cheated by jumping the gun, but
stupid needy me… wanting to measure up in Jake’s eyes, I sped
ahead of him easily and he seemed to deflate and then gave up
completely as I zipped by him.
Each time we had a contest of sorts, I felt the distance between
us widen and stupidly I did not know why. I finally learned why
when on a final occasion, Jake and my brother James were
wrestling good-naturedly in the kitchen. Both were laughing as
they struggled. James was giving Jake a run for his money, but
Jake was still dominating the event and happily doing it.
Despite my budding manhood, despite the sprinkling of facial and
chest hair, and my muscular one hundred and forty pounds; at
that moment, I was once again six years old and filled with
childish desire to play with my father or a fraternal figure. I
was a child that wanted to play and to please. Without thinking
I rushed in to playfully assist my brother. As soon as I
grabbed Jake, he snarled and cursed viciously for me to back
off.
Standing there dumbfounded and hurt to the marrow, my newly
whiskered upper-lip started to quiver like the six year old I
had momentarily reverted too.
I was
on the verge of bawling as such.
My mother had been in the kitchen preparing food for supper when
she witnessed what had happened. Feeling my hurt in a way that
only a mother can with her little boy, she rushed over to pull
me aside into another room as Jake and my brother happily
resumed their tussling.
Mom looked at me with deeply emphatic eyes as I struggled to
maintain a stoic and manly exterior.
She said, “Honey, don’t let what Jake said bother you.”
Reacting without waiting to hear more and once again on the
verge of tears I
whined only as a six year old can, “I just wanted to have fun
and wrestle with them.”
“I know Sug, but Jake is afraid that you are stronger than him,
and I would never tell him, but the truth is you are and it
hurts his pride that you are.”
It was then that I realized that I had unwittingly helped to
create the rift between us and sadly I somehow knew that there
would be no repairing it.
It was years later that my mother and even much later my
brother, one of Jake’s children had recounted to me that just
like me… Jake had a father that shamed him from the earliest age
till he joined the Marines -- for needing glasses, for being
sickly, small, weak, and un-athletic. His father was ashamed
that his oldest boy had not turned out to be the he-man that he
in truth was.
Jake, like me, as I had been before I reached puberty, had also
been compared unfavorably with his younger brother who happened
to be very husky, strong and robust.
Knowing all of this helps me to understand why, but still has me
lamenting for what I wished could have been. But instead, the
tone between us at best -- for the rest of our lives has been
mutual respect and discomfort and emotional insulation and
distance. I wish it had been different.
I must digress a bit and mention that this rift between men,
especially men related to each other does not just occur when
one has issues and demonic insecurities of the past that we are
constantly trying to repair.
I have found that even when you best a person in a contest who
does not suffer unduly from insecurities – there can be
problems. For instance it does not matter what the contest is,
be it physical, mental or what have you.
For example, Jake’s brother who is robust and very strong,
decided to make a grab for me in front of his girl friend while
we were all frolicking in the swimming pool. I was fifteen and
one hundred and forty-five pounds and he was at the age of
twenty-two a very muscular one hundred and ninety-some pounds.
Because of my early imprinting and underlying insecurity about
not being good enough; I did what my reactive protocol required
of me and I went all out and turned the tables on his move and
held him helplessly in a full-nelson until, like his brother
before him, he too snarled and cussed at me to let him go.
Although, Reggie had never suffered the humiliation of defeat
prior to our tussle, he was red faced with shame as his girl
friend looked on with amazement at my startling strength.
I have often pondered how odd it was for people that easily
suffered humiliation when bested seemed to be the most ready and
pleased to best another even to the point of forcing a contest
on their opponents.
These facts have plagued me my whole life.
People seem to only respect and admire strength, intelligence
and competence in any arena; they crave these traits for
themselves. On the flip side of the coin many of these same
people despise weakness, dullness of wit, and incompetence of
any sort.
Yet, if these same people are confronted with the fact that
another person is smarter, stronger or more competent, then
jealousy often sets in.
All my
life, many people have evaluated me in one extreme or the other
in both mental and physical arenas. Depending, on the person's
perception I have been considered a genius or a dullard, or the
most gifted physically or the most incompetent.
Society offers rewards or punishment and sometimes either is
offered for each extreme.
I have
struggled to learn how to walk the edge that will inspire people
to leave me alone, or realize I was competent enough for their
respect, but not engender fear or jealousy.
Often this task will prove to be toughest the closer a person is
to you.
I have
wondered, what is the correct formula?

MOST PEOPLE TALK BULLSHIT:
One Primate's Search For Intelligent Life
(EXODUS)
MOST PEOPLE TALK BULLSHIT:
One Primate's Search For Intelligent Life
(REVELATIONS)
MOST PEOPLE TALK BULLSHIT:
One Primate's Search For Intelligent Life
(JUDGMENT DAY)
ADVENTURES IN MARINE BIOLOGY
THE MARINES: GOD'S CHOSEN
WARRIORS
VINCE'S GYM
CONVERSATIONS WITH NEO
NEO TEACHES ME THE ART OF WAR
& PEACE;
His Version of The Matrix
MEMORIES OF MY FATHERS
ZEN & THE ART OF RESISTANCE
TRAINING:
A Yogic & Scientific Approach To Weight
Lifting
ZEN & THE BIOLOGY OF
TRANSCENDENCE:
The First Matrix of Psychic
Phenomena
ZEN & THE ART OF KINESIOLOGY:
The Yogic & Scientific
Approach To Movement
ZEN & YOUR ENERGY SYSTEMS
ZEN & VARIOUS ASPECTS OF
TRAINING
MOST PEOPLE TALK BULLSHIT:
One Primate's Search For Intelligent Life
(GENESIS)
HOMEPAGE
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