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Sunday, March 18, 2007

9 Paper Route Driver: The Semi-spiritual Journey of a Not Very Religious Man

Dad loved the paper route. It was more than a job to him, it was a declaration. Each morning he traveled those couple hundred miles, each bundle of papers he opened, each newspaper he folded and inserted into the newspaper tube was an identity-affirming and existentially profound declaration of independence that went something like this:

"You're not the boss of me."

And to be sure, no one was the boss of my father, not even himself if we're going for total accuracy, which I think is the point.

My father had too many people in his life vying for position of boss. His father was his first boss. That arrangement lasted 16 years. My father left his father's house in protest at the age of 16 and never returned as a boy; he walked out the door a 16 year old boy and entered a world that required him to be a man. A world that requires a boy to be a man can be a place so hostile, so cruel that only a fool would enter it too early. My father was no fool, or if he was, he was the lesser of fools. Even the hostility of an unforgiving world was an improvement from life with his father.

As a young boy, my father asked his father a simple and innocent question about God and religion. The response was harsh and abusive. With hate in his eyes, my grandfather looked down on his young son with a piercing glare and said, "There is no God; I AM YOUR GOD." Now, I believe there is an honest way to arrive at the conclusion that there is not God. It's a false conclusion, but I believe you can get there honestly. On the other hand, there isn't any honest way to arrive at the conclusion that you yourself are God. There is something besides honesty driving that self-assessment.

When you are at a young age and your father declares himself to be God and insists on abusing you so harshly and frequently that you launch from home prematurely, there is this chance, methinks, that there might be some authority issues on the horizon.

How does a boy whose father has made a divine self-declaration prove the untruth of the claim? Such claims cannot be ignored or brushed off by a son like others from the outside can. A boy becomes a man by way of the man he calls father. Although my father knew that his father was not God, he didn't have enough proof to be convincing. When your father lies to you, it's hard to be convinced that he is lying unless he allows himself to be convinced that he is wrong. My grandfather was never wrong.

One way for a son to prove that his father is not God is to replace him as God. It is the way of the Sith. I think my dad had moments when he tried to believe that he was God and not his father, but my dad had at least sense enough to realize he did have some failings which disqualfied him from Deity status.

Another way for a son to prove his father is not God is to make a daily declaration that what is a lie really is a lie. It is the daily discarding of the lie and daily hope that there is truth - hope enough in truth to look for it. This declaration needs to be consistent, ritualized, and affirming that there is truth beyond oneself.

And when you think about it, doesn't that define worship? Isn't worship the discarding of that which is not God in the hopeful search for that which is? Isn't worship a declaration to everything not God that, "You're not the boss of me," in hopes that there is something worthy of being my boss?

Most people practice this ritual inside the walls of a church. My dad did it on the dirt roads of Lakeville, Minnesota - delivery in the daily news.

7 comments:

Phil from Minnetonka said...

Please consider this a clarification, not a defense.

Having grown up under the tutelage of "Grandpa Eli" I can say that he never claimed (to me anyway) to be the god - as in the one and only. I believe he felt, as the sole breadwinner for 12 children and a wife, that he was the god of the family. A small domain - but something he could really call his own.

Eli hated the Catholic church and spent the entirety of his spiritual energy teaching us that we didn't need church and that we should worship him. So i guess he was only half wrong. ;-)

Eli's theology was twisted and convenient for him. I'm sure it made him feel better about himself. He also was a very different head of household for offspring #1 than for #11. A dozen children will suck the life force from anyone - god included.

I'm glad your Paper Route Driver found peace in his route as I find peace clearing brush (very George Bush-like!) in my back yard.

Worship is a difficult word for me. I prefer 'admire'. Pretty much the same thing, only less groveling.

Fajita said...

Phil, your feedback is like gold to me, especially as I try to reconstruct a portrait from the scraps of information I got from my father. He was pretty secretive of his childhood.

My information comes from a troubling conversation I had with the Paper Route Driver about views of God. I say the conversation was troubling because of how my father told the story, the look in his eyes.

Now, I should say that the conversation we had was after a couple of significant physical injuries my father experienced, so there might have been some distortion in his recollection. At the same time, there exists at least some remnant of a troubling experience for him.

I wish I could go back in time and learn more about what his childhood was really like. What I see is a man who never got to be a boy who never got to be a man.

And to be honest, I wish I could know Eli more, better. I don't know if it would do him any good, but it might do me some good.

Len said...

Chris,

I've spent about 10 years researching family history and trying to sort out the reasons why my family is so dysfunctional.

The more I learned about my grandfather, the more I hated him and the more that I understood my own father.

So I guess in reality I only pushed the hate back one generation.

Remember that line from Mike and Mechanics, "Every generation blames the one before....."

Be cautious is all I'm trying to say.

Phil from Minnetonka said...

I have a very interesting experience to share about something I learned about my father. I promise I'll blog it soon so I can give it sufficient space. But long story short - there is good and evil in everyone. It was very heartwarming for me to stumble on the good in my father, for I had long ago concluded there was mostly evil.

Fajita said...

I need a good Eli story. In fact, I have been doing a lot of thinking since writing this last, last than graciou, installment and realize that I must find a redemption narrative for Eli as I have found for my father.

My bloglines reader will pick up the post once it is up. I am looking forward to it.

Phil from Minnetonka said...

Please consider this a clarification, not a defense.

Having grown up under the tutelage of "Grandpa Eli" I can say that he never claimed (to me anyway) to be the god - as in the one and only. I believe he felt, as the sole breadwinner for 12 children and a wife, that he was the god of the family. A small domain - but something he could really call his own.

Eli hated the Catholic church and spent the entirety of his spiritual energy teaching us that we didn't need church and that we should worship him. So i guess he was only half wrong. ;-)

Eli's theology was twisted and convenient for him. I'm sure it made him feel better about himself. He also was a very different head of household for offspring #1 than for #11. A dozen children will suck the life force from anyone - god included.

I'm glad your Paper Route Driver found peace in his route as I find peace clearing brush (very George Bush-like!) in my back yard.

Worship is a difficult word for me. I prefer 'admire'. Pretty much the same thing, only less groveling.

Len said...

Chris,

I've spent about 10 years researching family history and trying to sort out the reasons why my family is so dysfunctional.

The more I learned about my grandfather, the more I hated him and the more that I understood my own father.

So I guess in reality I only pushed the hate back one generation.

Remember that line from Mike and Mechanics, "Every generation blames the one before....."

Be cautious is all I'm trying to say.