Good Fences

“Good Fences Make Good Neighbors” and Other Confessions

Part I:  Awareness

I remain awake at night worrying about my son in this house.  Like many other fathers, I want to protect my son.  I want to barricade this house.  There are malevolent people lurking. This is my property, I pay taxes, and now that I am a father I want to fence my family in from those people out there.  In obsessive compulsive fashion I make sure that all the doors, windows, and locks are set in “castle mode” before I go to bed.  Lisa is certain I am crazy.  I simply remind her of the evil that lurks outside, as evidenced by the detailed warnings delivered nightly by the people with very white teeth on the evening news.

Many people have walked the floors of this house.  The most impressive footsteps are those of Lucas for he is my son.  When he wakes up in the morning, Lucas jumps out of bed and runs to the edge of the stairs where he can barely see the light in the kitchen.  He calls my “name” out with an inquisitive tone:  “Dad?”  I assure him that I am downstairs, and this is important to him because there are monsters in the kitchen if I am not there.  When all is safe, and Lucas is assured, he begins the slow walk to my arms, one step at a time.  Amazing.  

Lucas and I watch cartoons and make funny faces at each other.  He likes it when I flare my nostrils simply because I have a big nose, and when I flare my nostrils they look like big caves in which bears must be hibernating.  Lisa is upstairs sleeping and enjoying the quiet solitude of the morning, knowing full well the fortress in which she sleeps is currently under full protection.  There are no monsters in the kitchen, and the evil that lurks is outside because I have locked all the doors and windows, and raised the bridge over the moat that connects the house to the street.

I make Lucas toast, or waffles, or yogurt with blueberries, and he helps me make a fruit smoothie with whey protein.  He covers his ears when I push the frappe button.  He says he wants to be like me when he grows up.  I tell him, without really telling him, that he is the representation of an Eastern mind, perhaps Buddhism defined.  He stands before me in a state of complete openness, aware only of his present feelings, his heart is on his sleeve, he laughs viscerally, yet he may cry at an instant, because that’s what people should do, and he is not worried about the future, or the dangerous people (only monsters).  He does not worry about the volatile nature of his feelings because they have not been defined for him this way.  He is awake.  He is pure.

I tell Lucas that I want to be just like him:  vulnerable to the moment at hand, and nothing else.  We smile at each other and proceed with the morning rituals.  He does not understand me when I speak this way, but I understand how much his presence, and innocence, mean to me.  There are bills to pay, projects at work, airplanes to Oakland, employees to manage, suspicious people in the neighborhoods, and planning for retirement. I worry too much.  I want to be like him.  I want to protect him by removing the frames that define existence.

I am doing the best I can to live in the present, to fully appreciate the now, but it does not come easily to me.  I am often reminded by Lisa of my inability to remain focused on the present, and I agree with these observations.  My practice of Ashtanga Yoga and knowledge of the Sanskrit name for the poses mean nothing to anyone.  I mention this as if to impress, to show I am attempting to marry body and mind into one seamless process.  One day at a time.  

I often go to bed repeating the famous directive by Ram Dass, namely, “Be Here Now.”  Looming earthquakes, evil people lurking, and the general state of the economy get in the way, however.  This is probably why I wake up early to exercise:  to burn off the excess stress that builds in my body, the pressure of my attempt to control the world.  When I fly in an airplane, for example, I imagine that I am controlling the takeoff and landing by hanging on to my seat with wild abandon, white knuckles and all.  I want to live more in the moment, and worry less about the turbulence in the world.

Part II:  Revelation

We live in a tract home:  a prefab home.  Prefabricated homes, just like friendships in California, aren’t made from the most stable of materials.  If the big earthquake hits, which I worry about, I am sure the world’s economy will collapse simply because many Californians will be homeless, and since California’s economy is essentially the 4th largest on the planet, I am sure stock markets will plummet in the aftermath and many people will remain homeless.  I don’t have any particular plans in place if the “big one” happens.  I suppose I may understand Buddhism on an even deeper level then…the part about the impermanence of all things.

When I first bought the house, the builder only promised the home, the structure.  In other words, the flooring inside was incomplete (think: slab of concrete), and there were no curtains on the windows.  Just walls.  In the beginning, before I had money to put curtains on the windows, I began to contemplate the life of a cognitively aware fish living in a fishbowl in someone’s living room.  No privacy.  I wondered what it would be like to never have curtains, to live in a fishbowl, allowing the outside world to always have a look into my life at night.  What would that be like?  Horrible, I decided.

Outside the house itself the builder was only required by law to prepare (to flatten the ground) the front and back yards for eventual landscaping, which I had to pay for.  All you could see surrounding the house was dirt.  There were no fences separating the neighbor’s yard from my yard.  Can you imagine no flooring, landscaping, window covers, not even a fence to protect my land from the neighbor’s land on either side?

Fences.  I thought quite a bit about fences in college.  I studied English at THE Ohio State University.  As an English major at OSU one must study the poem “The Mending Wall” by Robert Frost at least 4258 times before graduation.  My experience was no different.  “Good fences make good neighbors” is arguably one of the most known lines from this poem, and certainly of any American poem.  There have been many dissertations and certainly thousands of debates about the meaning of that line.

When I was in college, I rented an apartment with several others and barely had enough money to buy a bagel at Bernie’s.  In comparison to my problems, the idea of building a fence seemed insane, and expensive.  I had some idea about the world, but not enough to contemplate the need to build a fence.  Whether important or not to the cosmos, the famous line from the poem continues to be contemplated in a variety of environments, though usually not at an insurance company, or in my barren backyard where I first met my neighbor, Tom.

When I met Tom, I began to contemplate the “The Mending Wall” in a different context. I did not discuss the poem with Tom; I thought it would be futile to philosophize with him, though admittedly being an English major I thought it my duty to remind Tom of Frost’s famous line.  Tom has since moved away, but when we first met he was quite intent upon immediately calling a contractor to build an impressive fence separating his land from mine.  I wondered if Tom thought I would make a better neighbor if we had a fence between us. Why was he building a fence?  Was it to separate us? Was it to make “his land” less “my land”?  I re-read the poem, thereby making my professors proud of their influence on me, and discovered a new meaning in the process.    

When I met Tom I was 25 and he was 50.  Now that I am 40, I understand the issues that prevented us from being true friends back then, and perhaps why he loved fences so much.  I was a new homeowner, bright eyed, not fearful of the future (in comparison to Tom), less hurt (presumably) by other people, awake.  I did not need a new season to arrive to re-build the fences in my life.  Tom did.  As we know, “seasons” is a metaphor for change.  Tom needed the change inherent to the change in seasons; he commanded control, and he wanted to create something of his own since most everything else was rotting in his life.  He complained about people, and was happy to have moved to a safe neighborhood where less evil may occur.

Tom was a suspicious guy, twice divorced, a government employee, angry at his children, and hateful of neighbors who did not grow big trees, take the garbage out on time, and mow their lawns every Saturday.  I tried to make Tom hate me less by placating his “old” ways.  I may have agreed with him to avoid an argument.  “He moves in darkness it seems to me.”

Now, 15 years after meeting Tom, I understand him a bit more these days.  And so, here is what I think about the meaning of Frost’s poem as it relates to Tom:  I think Tom believed very few people in life are worth knowing, and those that you do allow into your life are best kept close. In order to sustain such an insular viewpoint, building fences, either real or imaginary, protects you and the ones you care about and provides that elusive secure feeling we all seek.  

It’s an awfully lonely life if you live it entirely this way.  That is probably why Tom was so unhappy.  The lesson for me is to learn to be more like Lucas, and less like Tom, or even me.