Showing posts with label Mentors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mentors. Show all posts

Friday, December 06, 2013

What Pearl Harbor Means to Me

 
I wasn't yet born on December 7th, 1941, so no matter what my understanding of that historical day, the true meaning of it cannot possibly be as alive for me as it remains for some. What does live on for me, however, is the memory of one man whose example made a great impact on my life. This is a reprint of a blog post that I wrote in 2011, titled "Luke Tucker - A Pearl Harbor Day Tribute." It remains one of the most popular blog posts on this site, so I chose to reprint it in honor of my old friend. I hope that you will enjoy getting to know the Mr. Tucker of my youth.

*


Luke Tucker was a wrinkled, loose skinned man with scraggly, white hair when I met him in 1980. His arms were hairy and covered with dark tattoos. He drank way too much, and I could smell the alcohol wafting from his Airstream trailer before sunrise on Sunday mornings. He had a quick wit, and would spout out one-liners whenever I delivered his newspaper. Over time we developed a friendship.

For the first few months, I delivered my papers from a baby stroller, often pushing the stroller with one hand while playing a broken harmonica (which my dad had given to me when I was four) with the other. One day Luke gave me a sturdy, new Western Flyer wagon with high slatted wooden sides. It was waiting at his doorstep when I came by. He said that if I was going to be delivering papers, I needed a good wagon or a bike to do it right. For Christmas the next year, he bought me a chromatic harmonica. It was exactly like the one my dad had given me, except that this one was shiny and new, and all of its reeds were in tune. I was 10 years old, and life was good.

Luke began meeting me outside whenever I'd come around in the afternoon. He'd sit out on the shaded cement patio listening to the tinny sounds of an ancient transistor radio. He would usually offer me a cup of lemonade or a 16oz glass bottle of Coke. I would tell him about my day at school, and he always had some new joke to tell that he had heard at the auto-shop where he spent his days helping out.

Over time, that familiar Sunday morning smell of alcohol disappeared, replaced by the pleasant aromas of bacon, sausage, strong coffee and maple syrup. The Three Stooges and The Little Rascals (already old classics by then) would be playing on his portable black and white television, which was connected by a flat cable to a tall, old-fashioned metal antenna outside. Canned audience laughter slid through the crack of the thin, cold aluminum trailer door as the sun began to peek over the eastern foothills.

Luke had long since met my mom, who correctly surmised that he was a harmless, likeable old man. One day, he asked her if it would be o.k. to have me over for breakfast some mornings after my route. Those old Sunday morning programs had always been his favorites, he thought I might enjoy them, and he would be happy to have the company. Besides, he was already making breakfast anyway... She gave her permission, on the condition that I didn't stop at his place until after I had finished my morning deliveries.

From that day on, I would finish those Sunday papers by 6am. Then I would rush back to Luke's trailer park, wagon in tow, or riding the bike that I'd purchased with my paper route money. We'd sit and watch the hijinks of the Stooges and the goofy humor of the Rascals. We laughed and laughed at those corny episodes. We'd trade jokes too: the latest that I'd heard at school and his better, grittier versions from decades long past. Eventually, always - Luke would go outside and light up a cigar. He would look through the smoke, into the distance, in silence. For a few minutes he was somewhere far away, in some unreachable part of his mind. Sometimes I'd stand out in the cold with him, quietly hoping that he really didn't feel as alone in the world as he appeared.

It wasn't until a year or so later, when he was the subject of a full page write-up on Pearl Harbor Day in our local paper, that I learned that Luke Tucker, my Luke Tucker, was a Pearl Harbor vet. I was shocked. How could I not have known? I was excited to see him again, to ask about his experiences, and to hear his stories of adventure.

It was a weekday evening; Luke was on his patio. He was drinking. He had had too much. I don't remember now exactly how the conversation went, but he went off on me and called me names. I was so upset that my mother went to his place and gave him a piece of her mind. She told him that if he ever spoke that way to me again, that interaction would be our last. He was either going to treat me well, or our friendship would be over.

The next time I saw Luke, his eyes were smiling through slow, silent tears. He was so sorry for how he had acted. I said to him, "I was just surprised that you were a hero all this time and I never knew it. I just wanted to hear your side of the story. I'm proud to know someone like you." The tears began to stream, but his posture remained stoic. His gaze was fixed straight ahead, looking at nothing. Slowly and deliberately he said, "I'm no hero. You don't want to hear the stories that I have to tell, and I don't want to tell them. I lost a lot of friends in that war; they are the real heroes. It's because of them that you'll never have to know the things that I know."

His big, leathery hand clasped mine for the first and only time. He looked me straight in the eye, and told me that I deserved all the best that life had to offer. He said that he was thankful to know that a child of this generation could live with so much joy. "You are a good kid and I'm proud to be your friend." Then he asked me to please, never ask him about that war, ever again.


*





***

Wednesday, December 07, 2011

Luke Tucker - A Pearl Harbor Day Tribute

 


Luke Tucker was a wrinkled, loose skinned man with scraggly, white hair when I met him in 1980. His arms were hairy and covered with dark tattoos. He drank way too much, and I could smell the alcohol wafting from his Airstream trailer before sunrise on Sunday mornings. He had a quick wit, and would spout out one-liners whenever I delivered his newspaper. Over time we developed a friendship.

For the first few months, I delivered my papers from a baby stroller, often pushing the stroller with one hand while playing a broken harmonica (which my dad had given to me when I was four) with the other. One day Luke gave me a sturdy, new Western Flyer wagon with high slatted wooden sides. It was waiting at his doorstep when I came by. He said that if I was going to be delivering papers, I needed a good wagon or a bike to do it right. For Christmas the next year, he bought me a chromatic harmonica. It was exactly like the one my dad had given me, except that this one was shiny and new, and all of its reeds were in tune. I was 10 years old, and life was good.

Luke began meeting me outside whenever I'd come around in the afternoon. He'd sit out on the shaded cement patio listening to the tinny sounds of an ancient transistor radio. He would usually offer me a cup of lemonade or a 16oz glass bottle of Coke. I would tell him about my day at school, and he always had some new joke to tell that he had heard at the auto-shop where he spent his days helping out.

Over time, that familiar Sunday morning smell of alcohol disappeared, replaced by the pleasant aromas of bacon, sausage, strong coffee and maple syrup. The Three Stooges and The Little Rascals (already old classics by then) would be playing on his portable black and white television, which was connected by a flat cable to a tall, old-fashioned metal antenna outside. Canned audience laughter slid through the crack of the thin, cold aluminum trailer door as the sun began to peek over the eastern foothills.

Luke had long since met my mom, who correctly surmised that he was a harmless, likeable old man. One day, he asked her if it would be o.k. to have me over for breakfast some mornings after my route. Those old Sunday morning programs had always been his favorites, he thought I might enjoy them, and he would be happy to have the company. Besides, he was already making breakfast anyway... She gave her permission, on the condition that I didn't stop at his place until after I had finished my morning deliveries.

From that day on, I would finish those Sunday papers by 6am. Then I would rush back to Luke's trailer park, wagon in tow, or riding the bike that I'd purchased with my paper route money. We'd sit and watch the hijinks of the Stooges and the goofy humor of the Rascals. We laughed and laughed at those corny episodes. We'd trade jokes too: the latest that I'd heard at school and his better, grittier versions from decades long past. Eventually, always - Luke would go outside and light up a cigar. He would look through the smoke, into the distance, in silence. For a few minutes he was somewhere far away, in some unreachable part of his mind. Sometimes I'd stand out in the cold with him, quietly hoping that he really didn't feel as alone in the world as he appeared.

It wasn't until a year or so later, when he was the subject of a full page write-up on Pearl Harbor Day in our local paper, that I learned that Luke Tucker, my Luke Tucker, was a Pearl Harbor vet. I was shocked. How could I not have known? I was excited to see him again, to ask about his experiences, and to hear his stories of adventure.

It was a weekday evening; Luke was on his patio. He was drinking. He had had too much. I don't remember now exactly how the conversation went, but he went off on me and called me names. I was so upset that my mother went to his place and gave him a piece of her mind. She told him that if he ever spoke that way to me again, that interaction would be our last. He was either going to treat me well, or our friendship would be over.

The next time I saw Luke, his eyes were smiling through slow, silent tears. He was so sorry for how he had acted. I said to him, "I was just surprised that you were a hero all this time and I never knew it. I just wanted to hear your side of the story. I'm proud to know someone like you." The tears began to stream, but his posture remained stoic. His gaze was fixed straight ahead, looking at nothing. Slowly and deliberately he said, "I'm no hero. You don't want to hear the stories that I have to tell, and I don't want to tell them. I lost a lot of friends in that war; they are the real heroes. It's because of them that you'll never have to know the things that I know."

His big, leathery hand clasped mine for the first and only time. He looked me straight in the eye, and told me that I deserved all the best that life had to offer. He said that he was thankful to know that a child of this generation could live with so much joy. "You are a good kid and I'm proud to be your friend." Then he asked me to please, never ask him about that war, ever again.


*





***

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Purr Bot - Shaman on the Mountain of Dreams

*





Purr Bot was a big, scruffy black cat who would roll over and purr at your feet the moment he made eye contact. He could sit in a lap all day purring, and his purring was usually accompanied by copious amounts of drool. He had the most soulful eyes of any cat that I've ever known. It seemed as if he could look directly into me, read my thoughts and know my heart. He had more love to give than any animal I've ever met.




About ten years ago, Purr Bot was thrown out of a car onto a busy street right in front of me. I stopped my truck, he ran under it, and then he jumped into my arms and starting purring loudly first thing. We've been together ever since. From Georgia, to California, to Louisiana, and finally Colorado... he's been my constant companion when everything around me was constantly changing.





It turns out that he was with me throughout almost all of my philosophical transformation and "growing up." He watched me go from an unhappy place to the happiest I've ever been, from being bound in military chains to becoming a free civilian, from someone who was simply "playing the game," to someone who is truly living and who has found true love.




During my personal transformation, whenever the Universe was trying to tell me something of real significance through my dreams, it chose Purr-Bot in the form of a cat-man avatar to convey its message. He became the shaman on the mountain, the being who held the keys to knowledge and the divine. To me, the real-life Purr Bot became something of a supernatural incarnation, a fuzzy, purring icon of The Great Mystery.




When I was a kid, one of only two cassette tapes I was allowed to play "without asking" was Jim Croce's "Photographs and Memories." If you had asked me back then (when I was about 9 years old) what song I identified with most, I would have definitely said "I've Got a Name." Somehow it just embodied me as I wanted to be.




This morning as I was driving back from dropping my fiancee off at work, I was looking at the beautiful fall trees and the bright blue sky, thinking of how lucky I was to have shared more than a decade with such a great pet. I was remembering the moment that Purr Bot and I first met, when he was just a sick black kitten that someone had thrown into a busy intersection. Just as I was envisioning that initial meeting, this song came on the radio. In my mind, it came straight from that silly cat. 


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YcqauC49Xmc






So long good buddy. You were the silliest, most loving, purest soul in cat-form that I've met so far in this lifetime. You were just the first of many simple, strange, and wonderful miracles that blessed my life during the time that we were together.



You were quite a character in real life, and the shaman in my dreams. Maybe we'll meet in that dreamland again sometime. Thank you for choosing me to share this lifetime of yours. Hopefully, your soul is purring somewhere safe and warm right now.






***

Friday, January 29, 2010

Parting Wish - A tribute to Dr. Donald M. Tuttle, Ph.D - "Doc"

Dr. Don Tuttle "Doc" was the man who showed me how to live well and to appreciate the wonders of the natural world when I was young.

From the 1940's through the 1980's he hauled groups of school-age kids, in the back of his pickup truck every Saturday, through moist alfalfa fields, along the banks of the Colorado River, and into the wilds of the beautiful and still-wild Sonoran Desert.

Doc passed away three years ago yesterday. His continuing impact on the lives of generations of young boys and girls is simply beyond measure. Thank you Doc.

Parting Wish
By: MrM
Feb 1st 2007

You walked in from the barren world,
Drew castles in the sand
Envisioned places far and strange,
Then placed them in my hands

In a fragile, clear, thin sphere of glass
Holding plants and magic things
To those mystic lands you added life
That had six legs and wings.

You gave, and gave, and never took
You always kept your word
You never left or changed you mind
You made others seem absurd

Without words, you said so much
In life you were so large
Yet modest, simple, kind, and true
You brought me safe this far.

When I was young you took the helm
And steered me from the rocks
As life's winds blew; you fashioned me
Winter clothes, thick hats, warm socks.

Through soft words and quick jabs,
Diatribes when I would hear
Wisdom shared guided my life
Through love, and truth, not fear

A boy I was when we first met
Confused I've been before
A man I am and ready now
To aim for heaven's door

So I accept your parting wish
Mentor, Teacher, Friend
I'm ready now to take the wheel
Held true until the end.

With Love,
MRM

Thursday, July 09, 2009

Abraham Joshua Heschel

I'm listening to the Speaking of Faith program from June 5th 2008 on my iPod. That program is titled: The Spiritual Audacity of Abraham Joshua Heschel.

I feel a bit ignorant for not already knowing all about this man... but I am deciding today to read his writings and listen to his words in the future. His words speak strongly to my understanding of God and to my own responsibilities.

Friday, October 17, 2008

Brooks Corbett

I just found out that a friend passed away recently. Brooks Corbett was an inspiration in many ways. In the picture above (from our trip to Mount Washington in 1992) he is the young man on the far right. We reconnected on Facebook for a brief time, and I am thankful for that final chance.

I met Brooks when I was 21. He was probably the first man my age that I was ever able to have a deep and caring conversation with. He taught me many things about friendship and about showing genuine affection and respect. I am a better man in the world today for having known him.

With gratitude and respect Brooks... I will miss you.

Friday, February 02, 2007

The Life of Dr. Donald M. Tuttle Entomologist

I discovered something really priceless online yesterday evening when I was doing a search for Dr. Tuttle's obituary.

I found an interview of Doc that was done by the Arizona College of Agriculture and the Arizona Historical Society Oral History program. In this interview he describes his entire life, including his work with 4-Hers. Something that he never talked to me about was his early childhood experiences with his mentor and entomology, which were almost exactly the same as my initial experiences with him.

For those of you that didn't already know... I was absolutely convinced that I would become an entomologist until I was about 18 years old. I joined 4-H with Doc as my 4-H leader in 1980 at the age of nine. I continued studying insects during high school in FFA, (Future Farmers of America) and then I worked for 2 years as a research assistant for the UofA Cooperative Extension Service in my hometown. A full summer of counting and separating thousands (maybe more) of frozen leaf hoppers into piles by species with a fine tipped water color brush changed all that. I'm still very much in a long-term, committed relationship with the study of living insects, their ways of living in the world, their communication techniques, societal make-ups, group dynamics, natural adaptations, etc. (If you need any proof of that - just check out the Skunkroot's Stompin' Grounds blog)

Here is the link to the .pdf file with the "Doc" interview:

http://www.ag.arizona.edu/alumni/oralhistory/DTuttle.PDF


And to the HTML version:

HTML Version of "Doc" Tuttle Interview

Dr. Donald M. Tuttle Obituary

I learned yesterday morning that my life-long mentor, teacher, and friend passed away on January 28th. He was the first person in my life, outside of the people in my immediate family, that ever gave me the idea that there might be a "right path" to be on, and even more importantly, that there might be an achievable way to get onto it.

I guess when it rains it pours sometimes, this has been on hell of a month.

Dr. Donald M. Tuttle has had a profound impact on my life. I am who I am today mostly due to his influence. I owe him so much, but he never asked for anything at all. I want to tell his story, and I hope to later this week.

I will share his obituary for now. I intend to write later about the role that he played in my childhood, and what his life and friendship has meant to me over the years. I will try to write some about that this week.

Here is the obituary for a man who completely changed the course of my personal history (from the Yuma Sun Daily Newspaper):


Donald Monroe ‘Doc’ Tuttle
Donald Monroe “Doc” Tuttle, 89, passed away at home on Sunday, January 28, 2007. He was born in Bay City, Michigan, February 1, 1917.

In March of 1940 he received a Bachelor of Science degree in Entomology with a minor in Plant Taxonomy from Michigan State College.

He served in the U.S. Army from 1941 to 1945.

After being discharged he returned to Michigan State College and graduated with the Master of Science in Entomology degree in 1947. Donald Tuttle married Dorothy Sheets from Bay City, Michigan in June of 1947. In 1952 he graduated from the University of Illinois and was awarded a Ph.D. degree.

The 1952 growers and farmers in the Yuma area of Arizona were interested in obtaining a Research Entomologist to work on their insect and mite problems. His primary work at the Yuma Agricultural Experimental Station was conducting research on arthropod pests in the valley.

Many of his discoveries are housed at the Smithsonian Institution as well as the U.S.D.A. in Maryland. He has written more than 180 scientific publications, including 2 books.

Dr. Tuttle officially retired from the university in 1983, and was awarded the title of “Professor Emeritus”. In March of 1996 Dr. Tuttle was given the Lifetime Award by the University of Arizona, College of Agriculture.

Surviving are his wife, Dorothy Tuttle; his son, Ronald Tuttle; his son, Tim Tuttle, his son, Andy Tuttle and wife Sherry; and grandchildren. Adriane Brinkley and Jace Tuttle.

All are invited to attend a graveside service at Desert Lawn Memorial Park on Thursday, February 1, 2007 at 10 a.m.

Sgt. Michael M. Kashkoush, USMC



*
 

Sgt Michael M. Kashkoush (a Marine) was killed in Iraq on the 23rd of January. He was one of my brightest students. His enlistment in the Marines would have ended this June or July, I believe. A memorial ceremony was held in his honor at the Presidio of Monterey, California this afternoon. Much of what I share here was related in that memorial service held to honor him. Mike is the second man that I've known personally to get killed over there in just a little over a month.

Mike wanted to go into politics to try to make the world a better place. He decided that in order to move his life in that general direction, he would not reenlist in the service. Instead of being dishonest with the military, and waiting until his training at DLI was finished before telling the Marine Corps about his intention to leave, he chose to let them know as soon as he made the decision. He told his superiors at the time that if he were to try to avoid going to Iraq by hiding the truth of his convictions, that would mean that somebody else would be sent over there in his place, and he wasn't going to have somebody else's blood on his hands.

He told people that asked why he was planning to leave the military that he wanted to go into politics to try to help fix the situation in the Middle East. He said that he thought the reasons for most of the problems were simply a great misunderstanding and ignorance. He traveled to Jordan on his class break to try to get a better understanding of the culture. He was known as "the stalker" by some of the Arabic instructors because of the way that he would always follow them around to get an opportunity to speak in Arabic or to learn more about the culture. His speaking was more like that of a native speaker than any of the other students that we had.

Michael was the one student out of 60 that stayed after class several times a week to speak Arabic with the instructors. He was a big-brother to several of the folks in the class and always had the right joke or the right thing to say to bring them around when the going got tough. He used to put me to shame at the gym. We spotted for each other there a few times and he would challenge me to catch up to him with the weights. He was a good guy.

Though he was considered by some to be a man of few words, he was extremely articulate, quick-witted, and obviously very intelligent. The few times that we spoke at length, he was filling me in on information that he thought that I should know about things that were going on with his classmates or his teachers, things that helped me to help them. When he did speak to me, he spoke to me out of his concern for and desire to help others. He never asked me for anything for himself.

There is a requirement in the military for personnel who are receiving any kind of training to have a certain, preset amount of time left in to serve when they graduate from their training program; that is how the military ensures that it will get a return out of the training investment that it's making. Mike chose not to reenlist, which would have left him with only about 8 months to serve upon graduation from his Arabic class. This decision basically forced the military (if it was going to follow its own long standing policies and retainability requirements) to remove him from his Arabic training early. About 3 quarters of the way through the class, he was pulled so that he could be sent to the fleet. He was already very fluent in the language. He knew that this would be the result of his decision, and he decided to go.

He was stationed to Japan, and the last I heard about him, that is where he was. Apparently he was deployed to Iraq in mid-January. He had only been there 10 days when he was killed by a sniper.

What on the surface seems to be the irony and the tragedy of his story is more complex than that. If Mike had decided to reenlist, he would probably still be in training now. Many of his classmates are still in other locations learning dialects and various language skills that they will need to do their jobs well in the future. The fact of the matter is that Mike knew that he would very likely end up in Iraq by deciding not to reenlist, and he made the decision anyway, because, in his mind, it was the right thing for him to do on multiple levels. Firstly, for himself, it was right to head in the true direction that he wanted to go in life. Secondly, for his commitment to the Corps, it was right to be honest and open about his intentions. Thirdly, for his country and for his fellow Marines, it was right for him to go to Iraq if called upon to do so, in order to carry out the duty that he had sworn to perform, so as not to leave his share of the burden for some other Marine to carry in his place.

It was indeed an honor to know Michael Kashkoush, or "Shukri" as those of us in his Arabic class will always remember him. He challenged me in so many ways to be a better person. He led by example and his character was absolutely beyond reproach. He strove for excellence, and attained it in every facet of his life that I could see. The military lost a good man last month. The United States lost a true patriot. The world lost a wonderful, smart human being. Many folks lost a true friend. All of us are left Mike's legacy with the challenge that his life presents to us: to be the best that we can be in everything that we do, to be true to ourselves even when doing so might seem more dangerous than going with the flow, to stand by the commitments that we believe in, and to avoid abandoning our fellow human beings, even if standing up for another might mean endangering our own life.


A friend of Mike's said today that when it came to the different races of mankind, Mike believed that there was only one race, the human race, and that he thought it was possible that someday we would all learn to live together, as free people, respecting one another and our differences. He wanted to try to make that happen, and I think that we should help keep his spirit alive by working together towards that goal.

Legacy.com Tribute:
http://legacy.com/WashingtonPost/Soldier/Story.aspx?personid=86140520


***


Monday, January 29, 2007

Goodbye Shukri

I received the news today that yet another man I knew has died in Iraq, this time brought down by sniper's bullets in Al-Anbar province in Iraq.

Sgt. Michael M. Kashkoush was a shining example to all who knew him.

Here is a quote from the blog of a true friend:


A friend of mine met me at the door of the dojo this morning
as class was ending.
I could see it in his eyes.
We cried on the sidewalk; a long embrace;
some man I never knew has died in Iraq
and I would have liked to --
to know him. Now
just secondhand memories remain.

And futile rage.

A picture of Michael
http://www.flickr.com/photos/52961928@N00/370831820/

More information about him
http://cleve.live.advance.net/community/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/cuyahoga/1169805101140120.xml&coll=2#continue

Thanks Ria, for your support - I'll always remember that you were there for me today.

Thanks Shukri, for your example of how to be a man in this crazy world.