You see it everywhere, in snippets and batches, at the grocery store, in the bleachers during Little League, but this morning it is as though I have been called to witness the ritual of a remote tribe — here, at the south neck of the Yuba River, a father in a Pittsburgh Steelers cap with a belly that spills to its sides and a pair of Ray Ban shades begins to dare his adolescent son to slide on his inflatable body raft over a series of rocks — class three white water rapids, which days ago swept four young children asunder. Are-you-sure-it's-safe? his little brother asks the air, he is maybe seven, a snorkel poking from his head, still amongst the dreamers, still in possession of a baby laugh, a gurgle that sounds like the water much further downstream. And it isn't safe; their mother on the beach knows this, her brow furrows, her hands worry, her skin blanches and then pinkens with the resignation of the familiar. A few years ago, three days after the Sierra snow melt began, I watched one young woman surrounded by a fleet of boys attempt to prove her manic inner pixie by shooting wine coolers at the edge of the bank. Then she plugged her nose and dropped down into a chute and got trapped between rocks very much like these rocks on the very same river. I stood in the water where she died, unable to move as the choppers brought the resurrection team who tried everything short of magic. C'mon, did you see that other guy? He went head first says the father, hoisting the raft out from under the boy, spilling him into the current so that he has no choice but to take the dare. In the 4th grade, I had a P.E. teacher just like this man, who dragged us outside during 2nd stage smog alerts, my inhaler threaded around my neck like his coach whistle was threaded around his. "A…..! he would yell, Three laps around the school!" for sassing him about the ozone layer, and I would stumble from one fence to another, lungs tight as bellows, worrying about my father, no longer allowed to drive to work in LA at a reasonable hour, dragging himself from the suburbs down the 605 at 5 am to do his part for the particulates that soaked the air. The teen boy looks at the water and pulls goggles over his eyes, turns his raft to point head first down the chute. The sun finds his face and for a moment he looks like one of the lost boys, bedraggled, orphaned, holy in the hot morning light. Then he careens head first through the crash and roar of the water and lands with the raft atop him, a boy sandwich. His little brother cheers, his mother says something inaudible, his father hoots a hoot of approval. But this isn't the end. They walk up the river a ways to a spot with a fifteen-foot cliff — I'm following now, subtly, working my way along the beach, as though I have been sent here to study the little nameless fish that live in the shade of the boulders on the river — and the father jabs him with an elbow and says, betcha can't jump from there and I am beginning to feel like this is old Russian fable of The Firebird where the Tzar lays out far more impossible tasks and says, "Do it, or your head shall no longer sit upon your shoulders" and so the kid climbs the cliff while the little brother sits on the pebbled beach; he too must learn to become a man someday, he must learn to gird and steel and follow orders in order to live. The adolescent on the cliff begins to shout. It is uncertain if he is shouting out of fear or if it is a war-cry he can hear echoed in the rocks from gold miners the likes of his father who bartered the scalps of the Miwok and the Nisean right in this valley for five silver dollars apiece. He is so loud that he is the loudest thing the river has heard today. He is so loud that I wonder if the river won't just give him a break and quit rushing for a few small moments so he can fall to his death in peace. Then the father yells, C'mon! and the boy steps forward as though about to receive something better than a father from God. He stands near the precipice edge, hesitant — does he hear his mother's inside mother calling, is he listening to a seed that lives inside him, a tiny scared future son, does he hear the river speaking the voices of the dead children pulled from the water last week, the terrible sound their throats must have made the first moment they finally breathed in? Don't piss yourself, his father yells into the canyon. Shame wins. He plugs his nose and steps forward into the blue infinite. From here on the beach, it looks like he does a tiny minuet on his way down, one little spin, as though he had said to himself if I am going to die I will dance into my next life, you sonofabitch. But he doesn't die. He pops to the surface like an otter, to the piercing whistle and clap from his pop, the very sort of catcall he too will learn to make a few years from now with his buddies in the dark on the street when a lone girl walks by. He swims down to where his mother sits and climbs out to the rocks, shakes himself off, pounds his chest, triumphant. He picks up his water rifle and begins to squirt everything in sight. The little brother squeals, the mother colorlessly says don't and he keeps going, aiming at leaves, at a squirrel, a warbler, at a lizard, at me, at the pale blank sky, he shoots until his supersoaker runs out of water and then collapses on a Mickey Mouse towel. He has earned this exhaustion. He has lived through one inalienable right of passage. On to Virginia Tech, to Columbine, Sandy Hook, San Bernardino, on to bully and to be bullied, he has aged this morning into his rightful being, he has joined the other race now, of men manufactured with one part fear and the other part, fear.
The Making of Men in the American Wild
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