Touched By Death

You ever think you were dead?  Or more clearly put, have you ever thought you were seconds away from dying?  I’m not talking about a death that is imminent but still arms length away; everybody has had that “death” experience.

Once I thought I had a brain tumor.  My father had died from a brain tumor so it didn’t seem like it was that far-fetched.  For weeks I had an odd pressure around the base of my skull, and eventually I decided to go to my doctor.  After examining me for a bit he suggested that I have a CAT scan done, and immediately the room went blank.

I remember thinking at that exact moment, as the nurse was rushing to get me a glass of water, that it really did happen the way you saw it in movies.  People did hear terrible news and their bodies did in fact collapse and withdraw from the conscious world.

I spent a number of long, sweaty, sleepless nights pondering the possibility of my death between that doctor’s appointment and receiving the results of the test.  But even in that context I knew that I would have time before drawing my final breath.

Time to make amends.  To right wrongs.  To say things that I have been derelict in saying to those that I loved.  To knock a few “bucket” items off the list in my waning days.  It was a feeling of impending death, but not of acute death.

I can honestly say that I never felt such a joyous relief as I did the day I found out my scan was clear.  I pulled over to the side of a busy freeway in Southern California and wept like a child in my car for what seemed like hours.  I then proceeded to call everybody I loved and told them I was “okay” and how much they meant to me.

After that I drove first to a liquor store and then to the beach.  I walked out onto the sand, feeling the sensation of each grain squeezing between my toes like it was the first time ever.  I sat down on a small dune just past the tides reach.  I watched a sunset like no sunset I had ever seen before.  I drank the best beer I had ever tasted in my life.  I pondered what I was doing in my life and how I could be a better person and make a difference in this world.

I made a vow that I would change my life.  That I would make good use of my “second chance,” and that I would live every day to its fullest.  That lasted roughly until the following Friday night when I went out and got shitty drunk with my friends.  That night I came home in a haze, somehow managing to empty my pockets, peel my clothes off, and fall into bed.

The next morning I got up around noon and stumbled into the shower.  As the warm spray from the nozzle began soothing my pounding head, I heard “tink, tink….tink.”  Perhaps a post binge delusion was taking hold I thought.  But there it was again…”tink, tink, tink.”  I turned around and saw an assortment of shiny coins on the shower floor.  As I looked down the back of my legs I saw the familiar faces of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln imprinted into my skin.

The day I thought I was closest to death was a beautiful green grass, blue sky type of day. Definitely not the type of day on which you expect to die.  I was sixteen years old and on the infield of the running track at my high school with some friends.  Nobody felt like practicing on such a beautiful day, so like most kids our age we decided just to fool around instead.

This took the form of taking the pole vault mat and flipping it end over end down the length of the field.  The mat was a massive foam type structure, easily six feet high and twelve feet long, and as we would topple it, it would curve over from its own weight before completely collapsing flat to the ground, somewhat reminiscent of a breaking wave.

Being that we lived in a surfing town, it didn’t take too long before somebody got the bright idea to “surf” the mat.  This involved waiting until the mat, which had been tipped up completely on its end, began to “crest” and then running underneath before it went completely flat.  When it was my turn to go, I shot under the beast as it rushed towards the ground, but lost my footing half way through.

And then it was dark.  Darker than any night I had ever seen.  I don’t think I was trapped exactly in the middle of the mat, but it didn’t really matter as I was covered completely on all sides.  I immediately panicked and tried to push myself up off the ground.  The mat was both heavy and soft so my efforts yielded little result.  On one side I could see a slice of light, and I yelled and tried to move towards it, but I couldn’t and the light went away.

I was genuinely afraid for my life at this point.  And then it got worse.

Not knowing the true peril I was in, my friends started to jump on and roll over the top of the mat.  I let a blood curdling scream that no one could hear.  I was having a hard time breathing as my face was smashed into the soft dirt below the grass.  I tried to cup my hand around my mouth to form a small cone, anything to allow a bit of air in my lungs, but it didn’t matter.  The weight of my friends on the mat was so great that I couldn’t expand my chest to inhale a breath.

I figured I had less than 60 seconds left on the earth at that point.  The thing was, at that moment I truly thought I was going to die, but my life did not flash before me.  Maybe I was too young for that to happen.  Nor did I think about the things I would be missing out on, or the loved ones I would leave behind.  All I could think of was the headline that read “Teenager Dies In Freak Accident.”

I don’t know what happened next, but suddenly the pit was lifted and I was free.  Just like that.  I think that someone else just wanted a turn to “surf” it.  I knew that there was no way I could impart to my friends what I had gone through in those terrifying moments so I didn’t even try.  By the same token, I never really mentioned this story to anyone in the years since because I didn’t think I had the ability to truly convey how fearful I was for my life.

Every now and then my mind will wander back to those moments under the mat, but I have to force it to stop.  Its like contemplating the universe while looking at the stars on a moonless night; if you let your mind go past a certain tripwire of thought, it will not end up in a good place.

Anyway….I was thinking about death today.

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Have Some Perspective

I puked once during a losing trade.  It wasn’t like a full-on “too many shots of Jäger” puke, but more like one of those sick to your stomach, “I can hold it in, I can hold it in”, dry heave type of pukes.

Puking has no place in the world of trading.  It should be reserved for rollercoaster’s, twenty-first birthday parties, and State of the Union addresses, and it was a sign that I was way too emotionally invested, instead of being objective and dispassionate.

I couldn’t help it though.  Each losing tick of that trade was like a dagger to my stomach.  I wasn’t even losing that much money, but it seemed as if I was in a tail-spin that I could not pull out of.

My field of vision narrowed to the point where the only thing that I knew still existed anymore was my trading screen.  Like Billy Mumy’s character in the Twilight Zone, I had wished everything except that damn screen into the cornfield.

All perspective was lost on that trade. That trade had become my whole world and everything about me.  My value as a human being and my place in this universe was dependent on the outcome of that trade.

In retrospect it’s not surprising that my trading was out of control, as I was going through a tough period in my life.

I was recently married, imprisoned in a business I hated but was too afraid to walk away from, and my ultimate fear, having children, seemed to be coming towards me like a runaway freight train. All this was messing with my head and I couldn’t trade my way out of a paper bag.  Day after day I was making bad choices, ignoring risk management, and pulling my stops, and it felt like there was nothing I could do to change.

Then John Nutting died.

My first memories of John start right after my family moved into our brand new tract home back in 72′.  He and his family were “original settlers” as well, having moved in just a week before we did.  One day there was a knock on our door and when my dad opened it, there was John.  He explained that he was getting all the “guys” in the neighborhood together to help out on a project.

It seemed that when the movers delivered all their belongings to the Harker family down the street, they refused to move the piano into the house and had just left it out on the driveway. John reasoned that if all the guys put their heads (and backs) together, they could figure a way to get that sucker in.  That’s the type of guy John was.

I will never forget the wonderful scene I watched that warm summer day as my new friends and I rode our bikes around the cul-de-sac.  There had to be ten fathers standing around that piano, studying it with intent looks; each proposing options and methods of ingress.

But the best part of the show was how after all the grunting, and yelling, and sweating was done, a case of cold domestic beer miraculously showed up, and this newly formed “band of brothers” luxuriated in the afternoon shade, reveling in their Herculean feat.

My father liked John right off the bat, which is probably why I initially liked him as well. Like my dad he too was handy, and his garage was full of old radios, vintage bikes, and a 57′ Chevy, all of which were in various states of repair.

When you’re a kid you regard adults as if they are entities from another world. You can’t relate to them, and the more they try to relate to you, the weirder it gets.  But with John it never seemed that way.  As a kid, talking with him was like talking to a best friend; always a relaxing and easy endeavor.

A fixture in the neighborhood; if you didn’t see him on one of his twice daily jogs, or working on a project in his garage, you would inevitably run into him at the local supermarket where he was the manager.  He was always there to help, always there to lend a hand, always the embodiment of the concisely descriptive Yiddish word “Mensch.”

As I got older and moved away from my parent’s house I saw John less frequently. When I would go to visit, it was strangely reassuring though to drive by his house and receive the same friendly wave I had remembered since I was a kid.

After my father died, John always made a point of checking in on my mom to see if she was okay or if there was anything she needed fixed around the house.  My mother would talk to him on a regular basis, and on some level he became a proxy male presence in her life in all the best and most platonic ways.

One day in 2003, after forty plus years in the grocery industry, John had finally decided to retire.  His wife and he planned to travel the country in the new RV that was already parked in front of their house.  A large portion of that travel involved visiting his grown daughters and his numerous grandchildren of whom he spoke about with great joy.

One month to the day that he was to retire, John got a call from the manager of one of his company’s other locations wanting to know if he could cover his shift.  Always willing to help out a fellow employee John agreed.  He phoned his wife at work to let her know the change of plans and walked out the door.

Less than three hours later he was dead, lying in a pool of his own blood, with a samurai sword driven through his heart.

That morning a mentally deranged employee entered the store, spoke to the floor manager, then drew a sword from under his coat and in one stroke nearly decapitated her.

A fellow employee recalled at John’s funeral what happened next.

Customer’s and employees ran for cover as the swordsman looked for other victims. People were running away and those trapped in the store began to grab items off the shelves like trashcan lids and beach chairs to defend themselves.

John was in his office away from the initial attack, but came running out when he heard the commotion.  As he saw the killer chase after and wound other victims, he ran towards him trying to distract his attention, putting himself directly in harm’s way.

He tried to talk to him and reason with him but the attacker took his sword and ran it through John.

John died a public but lonely death.  There was no last kiss from his high school sweetheart wife.  No final encouraging words for his loving daughters.  No last press of a slight hand from the grandchildren he cherished so much.  All there was, was a cold steel blade robbing him of every moment he had ever lived or ever would live.

Perspective can come to us in both subtle and dramatic fashion.  John’s death brought it crashing into my life in a way that made me feel small and petty.

Just days before my head was “messed up.”  I was going through a “tough period in my life.”  I was “spinning out of control” and I was puking.  Why?  Because the red and green lines on my computer screen were not doing what I wanted them to do.

It’s easy at times to forget that this is what we are doing; trying to make money off the movements of the red and green lines on our screens.

And it’s hard on a daily basis to keep macro events like John’s senseless death in mind to provide us with perspective.  Our brains are not wired that way.  But without perspective, we often lose the context that keeps us balanced and reminds of this great gift called life, and the good things it has given us.

I try to remember that when I am at a light and see a man in a wheelchair cross in front of me.  Or when I read of the wife and child that a fallen soldier or policeman has left behind.  Or when I feel that I don’t have enough, when I have so much.

Although I still occasionally wring my hands or shout out a brief curse word when a trade doesn’t go my way; I haven’t puked ever since John’s death.  And the thought that I could have lost so much perspective that I once did, makes me feel silly and ashamed.

The Los Angeles Times Report On The Incident That Caused John’s Death

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