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Joe Bauer

7 SONS ...AN  AMERICAN FREE FOR ALL

 

I am 54 and not an established or exprienced writer. But my 6 brothers and I lived and shared a rough and tumble American childhood in the 50's and 60's that I believe would make a compelling, colorful, interesting and relevant story about what life was "really like" back then.
 
Not just for us 7 sons but, for also millions of other Americans who could easily and strongly relate to this emotionally powerful and much more commonly shared American social experience than our history books ever truly or adequately report.
 
It is a story that at times was sadistically tragic and at other times uniquely and poignantly hilarious. And most of this story took place on the prestigious Monterey Peninsula which adds some celebrity and stunning natural beauty and interesting historical and film locales to the story ( think Summer Place, Play Misty For Me, Vertigo, Cannery Row and so many others .)  There's even some fun anecdotal references to some of the great writers who lived here and wrote about this area such as ... Steinbeck, Miller, even Stevenson. etc. So the story has an attractive and colorful setting despite it's often heavy theme. I think this makes it a relatively more atrractive and palatable place to set the story than the dreary, depressing backwoods and swamps of Louisiana or Georgia. Here, one of the abused, kicked-out-into-the-night boys will wake up on a beautiful beach surrounded by curious, circling,  squealing seagulls or underneath a tree with a chirping squirrel or deer staring at him next to one of the beautiful golf courses that abound on this golf crazy Peninsula.

I have debated for years as to the merits of my story either being too subjectively built up in my head and not worth sharing, versus being more unusual and interesting and worth telling than countless others stories of this genre such as "This Boys Life" etc. Although I believe there is more attractive setting variety and definitely more humor in my story of 7 sons and brothers experiencing and surviving this together. 

The story really has three seperate time frames: Would they all be part of this book? Or is there just too muc story here and maybe it should be more than one book?

The saga begins:
 
Mid 1930's to September, 1952:

Poor but honest and innocent 18 year old Iowa farm girl hates the farm life in the 30's. Goes to Chicago and gets seduced by a charming small time gangster. Starts a life on the run and at same time has 7 sons by this fellow. Incredible 15 year time of adventure, sacrifice, tragedy and drama ends with these two adults and 7 sons ( one in diapers) chugging "Grapes Of Wrath" like into a small town in California ( Pacific Grove ) in 1952 after living and running all over the country.
 
 
September, 1952 to December, 1960:
 
Alcoholic father deserts one too many times. Divorce and financial struggle follow and at first threaten to dispurse brothers, but then welfare and befriending old neighbor lady angel help keep mother and sons together as one family. Poor but somewhat full and fun life with 7 sons and single mom goes on for 5 or 6 years and is perversly hilarious, difficult, all boy crude at times. Eventually exhausted, aging and desperate-for-help mother meets and is pressured to marry seemingly great promise making but actually toughest most violent guy between Los Angeles and San Francisco.
 
 
December 20th, 1960 to June, 1969:
 

Immediately after this marriage war begins between step-father and boys. Entire town becomes involved. Almost daily battles of booze, blood and cops with audience of high school classmates constantly parked on our street waiting for most exciting nightly entertainment in town. House known as "The Brunswick Club" as step father looks like bowling pin; bald with big belly on his 6 ft. 3 in. frame. Entire neighborhood is effected with elderly neighbors having heart attacks, residents moving, hiding, closing window shades, shaking in their homes to blood curdling screams and loud jazz playing all hours of the night. Battles include smashing windows, blood curdling screams, threatening shouts, booby traps and late night chases up and down streets and climbing in house late at night over roof tops and through upstairs windows.



Reputation extends through out entire community as step father is known and feared and hated as cheapest, meanest guy in town. Stepfather brags, taunts and constantly reminds one local gas station owner that he once tipped him a penny prompting gas station owner to contemplate hiring a hit man to whack stepfather.



Step father is also jazz drummer and plays old jazz standards as loud as possible in middle of late night pitched battles. Surreal scenes of Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Dave Brubeck, Rosemary Clooney, Joe Williams and other jazz and vocal greats playing full blast at all hours of night during life and death battles and chases. ( " I Get No Kick From Champagne" and "Back In Your Own Back Yard" ) are two of my favorites.

Children become perverse celebrities at school due to sick gladiator type battles at home while at same time becoming hardened, heart broken and shame feeling warriors on verge of mental breakdowns. Mother keeps sane by getting hooked on Country Club Stout Malt Liquor ( and eventually valium ) and chain smoking Marlboro cigarettes and watching Lawrence Welk, Ed Sullivan, The Honeymooners and other mind numbing TV shows night after night until the fireworks begin. Step-father would stand bug-eyed and rant like crazy about how much he hated Jews, Blacks and Democrats and praise Nixon when ever he watched the evening news. Kind of a cross between Archie Bunker and Frankenstein.

Boys become experts at guerrilla warfare and survival techniques. Spend days planning for each night's battles. Discover their own and not often successful unique ways to cope with constant violence and chaos with even some humor involved. Kids eventually leave to join military where they can find an easier, less tense and less dangerous life with some peace and quiet and a good nights sleep. Years later, wife beating step-father is introduced to marijuana and loves it as it makes his music sound better. He loses his taste for alcohol and ruins local liquor store revenues and he transforms miraculously into a nice guy who quits beating our mother and actually told me to keep a nickel in change once after going to the store for him to get something.

In between this general story are extremely graphic violence and sadistic sexual stories that are hard to read about but absolutely true. And the fascinating, more introspective, reflective smaller aspects of typical abused, neglected American children and their inner thoughts, coping mechanisms and feelings and struggles during all of this are exposed and explored.

Several interesting but few second interactions and stories with local celebrities such as Bing Crosby, Lucious Beebe, Al Geiberger, Joan Baez, Shelley Winters, Herb Miller, Clint Eastwood, Jack Nicklaus,  John Denver, John Wayne, Dean Martin etc. take place here on the prestigious Monterey Peninsula South of San Francisco. 

Of 7 sons, oldest received PHD.( died of colon cancer at 40.) Second is art director for the Sacramento Be. 3rd is retired Navy Chief. Next two are lithographers. 6th is long time PG&E employee...and the 7th of 7 sons - me ( is just a story teller.) 

I call  this story of seven sons growing up in the fifties and sixties an " 7 SONS ... AMERICAN FREE FOR ALL."  
 
 I use this term " American Free For All " because I feel it best describes this simply chaotic and too often shared traumatic and powerfully sad experience of children living in these type of domestically violent homes in that time period versus the opposite false image ones of TV depiction such as "The Donna Reed Show", "Leave It To Beaver", " My Three Sons", "Ozzie And Harriet" and later "The Brady Bunch."
 
I believe that most people of that generation can relate to these more true, powerfully dramatic and personal lives and society affecting life family situations and derive more from their written exposure. Too many have never dealt with these experiences in a cathartic way. My story is at least an attempt to do this in some ways for me. I think my story might very well be this way for them also. 
 
This particular American family free-for-all story of mine does have more unique and attractive aspects to it than most others I believe.


Short synopsis:

Real American Kid Life In The 50's/60's.

I was raised as one of seven brothers ( no daughters ) in a mostly single parent, welfare type situation. I was the youngest. It was rough. Call us the "Brady Bunch...from hell!"

I thought it was normal to get picked on, ditched and called self-image destroying names every day by my older brothers.

And to have gross tricks constantly played on you like finding someones dirty, stinky socks and underwear lying on your pillow when you woke up.

But it could also be very funny at times.
 
When our mother would say " okay boys, time to eat." all you saw and heard were arms flailing and reaching, entire bowls of food disappearing in seconds, sounds of knives and forks hitting plates like mini jack hammers, loud gulping of milk and competetive burping and orgasmic sounding gnawing, chewing and swallowing like a pride of voracious lions ripping apart a carcass!

Nope, no fancy/shmancy discussions of the latest news, books and movies at our dining table. Just anxious looks of who was gonna get what first and what was gonna be left over for the weaker scavengers. Even chicken necks got picked clean!

Dessert was usually entire gallons of the cheapest store brand ice milk smothered in generic chocolate sauce or massive cakes made with huge layers of frosting. And this was inhaled and finished off in 2 to 3 minutes.

My mother also used to make us the same school bag lunch every day. Elvis style peanut butter sandwiches with 2 inch thick spreads of that cheap Skippy brand of peanut butter (the kind that was basically peanut flavored Crisco ) and a banana. Always a banana. I ate this same lunch for years. I also suffered from constant stomach cramps and class disrupting gas at a very young age. One day I traded my lunch with another student for his cafeteria food. I noticed that before lunch recess was over this kid that had eaten my gigantic Crisco sandwhich was clutching his throat with both hands and grimacing in excrutiating "Oh-My-God" heart burn pain!

Finding time to use our one bathroom required great skill, speed and control. It seemed someone was always pounding on the door while you were trying to do your duty. No privacy at all. And taking a bath was just a once-a-week affair. We were so poor we had to use the same one tub of bath water. Being the youngest I always got the last bath. It was years until I finally figured out why my skin always itched. It was from all that grey, flakey, pubic hair floating water I was forced to bath in? And to think I did the underwater bubble blowing thing like other kids...EGAD! Unlike a lot of other boys I loved the showers when I got into junior high school. I never felt so clean in my life!

And being so young I never understood why the neighbors were so wary of us. I thought the vandalism and other property damaging mischief around the neighborhood was caused by scary outside bad men...it wasn't until my pre-teen years that I discovered that it was my own brothers doing this! Not all of this mayhem was serious however. Once, one of my brothers stole a "We Give S&H Green Stamps" sign and hung it on the bottom of a local Mortuary street sign.

No wonder my mother begged us to join the military as soon as we dropped out or graduated from high school. Thank goodness for welfare, old Dr. Heath and the military. But this was "real" life for half of country's kids back in the 50's and 60's. It wasn't an "Ozzie and Harriet", "Leave it to Beaver", "Donna Reed Show" believe me.

Here are a couple of other true little side stories that are part of this American Free For All childhood story.

The first one is a short encounter with the famous writer Lucious Beebe.

Years ago in the fifties and early sixties our town had an old train station that had been basically abandoned for 30 years. It was a fascinating step back in time with the old station buildings still standing and with dilapitated platforms and many rock smashed windows. I used to have to walk through here to get home and I would often stop and study the old place and think what it must have been like when it was busy and being used. A few Sand company trains still ran on these tracks by the old station and they had a turn-around track for the train engines and a water tower that still pumped it's hold into the locomotives.

One day I noticed a very interesting and kind of ornate looking old style train car pulled off to one of the side tracks. It was just so different looking than the usual old and weathered cars that made up the train lines that came through once a day. I walked over closer and noticed a couple of large dogs tied to one of the outside railings. At some point I struck up a conversation with "someone" around the car. I really can't remember who this person said they were or if they did at all.  But they told me that this train car belonged to a "Lucious Beebe." I excitedly went home and told my drunk parents about this interesting train car and mentioned this name "Lucious Beebe" to them to which they slurred..."Who?"..."Never heard of em'" After a day or two I never saw the car again. But what an unusual site it was. Made you think of different places and different times.

Another little story that came to me recently ( and I cried while telling it ) was this; At around the age of 12 to 13 I was wandering around town at dusk with no place to go ( certainly didn't want to try to go home to that war zone ) and I found myself sitting down exhausted on a sidewalk curb ( right next to the street ). As I was feeling so alone and desperate and sad I just broke down from all the stress and started to cry; right there on the curb. Just then a limousine pulled up and stopped at the traffic light in front of me. In the back circular port hole window was Bing Crosby's face with his trade mark pipe. His eyes met my crying eyes ... I recognized him immediately as I knew he lived just a few miles into Pebble Beach. The celebrity shock and stare I had combined with my crying didn't seem to move him at all. He had a fixed cold look on his face. For the next 30 seconds he didn't show one twitch of emotion as he watched me crying. Then his car drove off. What a weird coincidence. But my sadness in that moment prevented me from contemplating this ironic exchange too much.  I eventually just got up and walked on. But this was my personal interaction with Mr. Crosby and that cold emotionless famous face image has stayed with me my entire life.
 
We used to call the house we shared with our stepfather "The Brunswick Club."
 
We moved into this two story barn looking house ( with the upstairs never completed and just unfinished framing and exposed open pipes and holes in the ceiling ) a couple of days after our mother and stepfather married on Dec 20th, 1960.
 
Two nights later the brothers and I and our mother were unceremoniously woken up and kicked out of this house at 2 in the morning by a raging drunk and threatening red-eyed Ted.  "This is "my" house...you bastards."   After Ted passed out we all snuck back in later that morning and kind of just laid in our beds waiting, listening for Ted to get up and go to work. But what a quick, ominous and nerve awakening shock that was.
 
The name "The Brunswick Club" came about like this. Years ago there were many bowling alleys in America.  Everyone did it occassionally. Now they have kind of died out. The largest company that manufactured bowling balls and pins was famously called the " Brunswick Company"
 
At some point in the brutal battles with Ted ( our Frankenstein-like stepfather ) one of the brothers mentioned that he looked just like an enormous bowling pin.
He had a small bald head and a long sloping neck ( like a turtles head and neck sticking out of it's shell ) and a very large belly that protruded as much as a pregnant women in her final term ( booze belly ). From a distance he did look just like a bowling pin. Thus arose the name "Brunswick"....like a Brunswick bowling pin.
 
The name 'Brunswick Club" came about after dozens of high school kids used to park down near our house at night to watch the battles. They would tell each other, I'll meet you at the "Brunswick" club.
 
And Ted wouldn't disappoint. Maybe half the time there would be violent action. This was better than the local movie theaters and hang outs. I think guys would actually bring snacks and their girl friends. To tell you the truth, I was ashamed to be a part of it all. But I didn't have time or a choice to feel sorry for myself. I was stuck there and I had to survive.
 
For a guy with such an odd build,  Brunswick/Frankenstein Ted could move...fast!
My brothers were incredibly athletic, incredible...but pregant looking Ted could catch them drunk and in wing tip shoes! 
 
Ted was a challenge. Mentally he was sometimes like a lobotomized creature, yes like Frankenstein, but sometimes he was very clever, cunning and sneaky. You had to develop the skills of a special forces navy seal to be ready for him. We would set up warning systems, booby traps and have escape plans. We often jumped out of the second floor windows to get away from his charges. We knew which bushes to hide in, what areas of the garage to sleep in and still be able to hear and see him coming, things like this.
 
And Ted could fight. And I am certain he liked to fight. Freakishly long, strong arms, quick hands...could take a punch like you wouldn't believe.  And amazingly,  getting hit just seemed to make Ted angrier and more invigorated!  Guess this was because he was Irish.
 
I was just a kid when all this began but even I had to learn the rules of battle and survival. I once pounded many nails into the sides of our front yard gate and strung rubber bands from my paper route very tightly from nails on one side to the nails on the other side so that when Ted chased me out of the yard I would jump the fence and he would go through the gate and get stung by all my taut rubber bands that he pulled off the nails as he came for me.  Zing..zap, twang, twap...it was all I could come up with at the time.
 
 
Occasionally even these other high school kids would get involved. One time Ted came after me during one of these brawls and an older teenage friend "Carlin Erickson" watching all of this nearby yelled at Ted " Hey CONLEY, why don't you back off the kid."
 
Big mistake...Ted caught Carlin right across the head with a Coors bottle and this fight really got into gear with everyone throwing punches and wrestling bodies spilling out into the yard. With colorful lights ablazing the cops finally swooshed in and told everyone to go home and they stayed for awhile to make sure everyone did as they were told. But it was an prolific event. An epic Spartacus verus Crassus battle.
 
The next day it was all the other kids wanted to talk about at school. I became a sick kind of hero. I actually hated this for many reasons but for one it actually made my chances for finding a "nice" girl friend almost impossible. The "nice" girls were actually afraid to get involved with me. And I didn't feel like a hero. I would have traded places in a minute with some kid from a normal family. Those battles scared the hell out of me and made me so tense that I could never ever unwind, ever!
 
When Ted was on a rampage he would often chase my mother and us out of the house as late as 12 to 2 A.M. in the morning. And sometimes he would barge out of the house to do further damage or to drag our mother back in.
We lived in a foggy coast line forested area. The local deer would often roam right into our large yard. One night after chasing us all out into the darkened night and then crashing through the back door a few minutes later to drag our mother back in the house Ted started chasing a deer thinking it was our mother Trudy. We were hiding in bushes and against the fence watching him chase this deer and all of a sudden the deer jumped and cleared this five foot high fence in one magnificent leap!  Drunken Ted stopped in his tracks, raised up and said to no one..."That sure as hell isn't Trude!" and sheepishly walked back in the house. One of the few times we could all laugh in the shivering cold.
 
Ted had a phobia about flies. One morning after a furious bloody battle the night before one of my brothers went around collecting a jar full of these and held them there by screwing on a lid. When he had at least a dozen or more flies, my brother stealthily opened a hang-over-sleeping Ted's bedroom door and let out the entire jar of these worked up flies!
 
Before too long you could hear Ted's frantic yelling all around the house, "TRUDY!... TRUDY!AAGGHHH, come and get these GOD DAMN FLIES out of my room!" Our fear-conditioned mother obediently rushed in and battled and squashed all these flies with her trusty, often demanded and used fly swatter as Ted lay angrily cussing with his blankets pulled up almost covering his face.
Aahhhh, sweet vengance !
 
Sometimes trouble seeking and instigating teenage acquaintances we knew would call and order pizza delivered to our house at night while Ted was outrageously drunk and crazy and yelling and fighting. This is before pizza restaurants had that telephone retrieval system to prevent false orders like they have now.
 
The street at the front of our house was just a few steps to an enormous living room exposing front window with curtains that always stayed open, even while Ted was yelling and cussing or even physically threatening or assaulting my mother or us in full view of who ever happened to be walking by.
 
When these pizza guys were called it was usually in the middle of one of these horrific exhibitions. Upon arriving at our house with their extra large pizzas in hand ( I actually watched this happen a couple of times ) these delivery guys would cheerfully and expectantly march up the little walk way toward the front door and right by the big front window.  
 
And then, they would suddenly halt upon hearing the screams and seeing this frighteningly mad, red, bulging, crazy eyed face of this great Goliath cursing and flailing behind this movie screen sized picture window !  After watching this horror show for a few seconds they would freeze and reel in croutching defensive fear and shock and quickly bound back wild eyed to their cars and burn rubber in their attempts to get out of there as fast as they could.
 
Incredibly, a few delivery guys would somehow defy human logic and would walk right by this scary surreal scene and start knocking on front door with it's loud metal knocker as if they saw this stuff all the time!   This would stop the scream fests...and Ted would lurch menacingly and angrily to the front door as if someone were rudely interrupting his only form of perversely stimulating exercise and entertainment.
 
The time I witnessed one of these actual door knocking pizza deliveries from the upstairs window directly above, Ted stomped to the front door after hearing this and then ripped it open with practically enough force to tear off it's hinges and in an enraged grizzly bear stance and rage, confronted the poor "OMG...I'm seeing-a-monster" looking pizza delivery man with a booming, bourbon reeking roar ..."WHAT THE HELL DO YOU WANT  ???"
 
And then, without even letting this stuttering, stammering fellow say a word, Ted maniacally slammed the door shut in his shaken face...KABOOM...and simply went right back to his magnificently mad rampaging!  This stunned pizza guy walked very warily back to his car glancing back nervously every second or two as if to confirm in his mind that what he just witnessed was real ! 
 
This home of Ted's is still standing, but I think that even today there is a scary energy emanating from it. People walking their dogs seem to stare at this house as if something is telling them that strange and powerful and unbelievable things once happened there. And little do they ( and their barking, anxious-to-get-away-from-there dogs )  know how right their ominous instincts are.
 
At some point in the late sixties one of the brothers coaxed Ted into at least trying a marijuana joint, reassuring Ted that doing so would make listening to his nightly assortment of old Jazz 33's an even better experience. Ted did so, and was immediately hooked. His music "did" sound much better. And wonderously, this seemed to make him feel much more relaxed and affordably different than quarts of Johnny Walker Red and or Stolychnya Vodka. He actually found himself laughing at peoples everyday comments instead of angrily pouncing on them because he sensed some communist liberal slant or minority lovin sentiment.  Within a few weeks an actual miracle was taking place. We thought about calling in the catholic church to confirm this. Ted, one of the meanest ,most angry, fighting, violent persons you could ever know...was becoming a nice guy!
 
He actually thanked his wife with a romantic smile for setting his little dinner table and tray for him every night in front of his lounge chair. His taste for booze had dwindled to nothing, which triggered many calls from the frantic local liquor store owner asking if Ted was mentally and physically okay. A good part of this liquor stores revenues were drying up?
 
Ted asked me to go to the store or him once during this time and actually thanked me when I returned and told me to keep the nickle in change! Ted was "truly" a changed man. I saw this with my own two eyes as many others did also. Thank God for marijuana we all thought. My mother used to get on her knees and say her blessings.
 
 Ted wasn't too good at rolling joints. They came out all mishapened and they were the size of cigars...but he would just happily laugh at himself while he made these and even humm or whistle in anticipation of his huge long drawn out puffs on these. For the first time in everyone's life, you could walk into Ted's house and not tense up. And in fact if when was smoking he was pretty good company. The music played, he sang along, he offered you a bite to eat. I think he even contemplated voting Democrat for the first time in his life!
 
Ahhh, but good things almost always sadly come to an end too quickly. After about a year of this bliss, Ted's doctor diagnosed him with chronic Bronchitis and told him he had to stop smoking his marijuana. You cannot imagine the gloom and dispair that we all felt with these doctors orders. Ted immediately started drinking again. He just flat out needed "something" to deal with or block out or soothe his savage beast demons that racked his soul. And since the mother-love-calming marijuana was out, the devil welcoming Cutty Sark and Gilbey's and Johnny Walker Red came back in. The liquor store owner had almost gone out of business before his prayers were answered again with Ted's renewed patronage and business.
 
With my families prayerful blessing ( and even Ted's ) I came up with one last desperate idea to try to stop the old Ted from returning while at the same time honoring Ted's doctors medical demands.  I took Teds lid of weed and bought a Betty Crocker Brownie mix and went back to my apartment and baked up a nice big batch of the most delicious smelling brownies. I must have used an entire pound of Ted's stash in this mix. The baking fragrance alone got me singing and laughing. When my great brown creation came out and cooled a little. I cut this up into 24 small squares.
 
Now, I was never much of a marijuana smoker, nor had I ever eaten any of these type brownies. But without even thinking I just grabbed one little square after another and started downing these as quick as I could liquidize them enough in my mouth to swallow them. By the time I got these driven over to the greatly anticipating Ted's house, I had blindly consumed 14 if these!
 
 I was in an unstoppable fit of laughter as I came in the back door with Ted's new miracle medicine food.  Upon seeing me in this doubled over state of hysterical laughter while I was trying to explain to Ted to just start eating these, he immediately grabbed a handful and started shoving them into his salivating mouth. I think I even recall seeing chocolate drool spilling out as he was maniacally mushing these about in a trance-like state ecstatic expectation. Ted wasn't eating these with manners in mind.
 
I ended up in the hospital a few hours later after hallucinating and blacking out. Ted went through the same stage but his tolerance level was higher than mine and I had eaten more than him so I think that after the laughing stage Ted just passed out for a day or two. But this grand effort just didn't have the desperately desired results and was embarrassingly put out of the loop of new ideas in dealing with Ted's return to devilsville.  But, Ted, never was too bad after this anyway. One main reason was he soon got colon cancer and this much of the fight out of him. He always seemed nicer than he was before all of this. His ability to drink just wasn't what it used to be. He suffered greatly until the end. I felt feelings about Ted during this time that I thought I never would. Together with the other feelings I had had about this Jekyll and Hyde, they have had a very confusing effect on my recollections about him as a person and the frightening and exhuasting experience with him. I think this is one of the compelling things helping me to want to write about this aspect of the entire story of the childhood of the 7 sons. 
 
 
There is much more. There is some tragic stuff, some sadistic stuff, some courageous stuff. But it shifts from time frame to time frame but I think you can get a feel for what I am trying to convey and capture here. And that this truly was a unique experience. Please let me know if you may be interested further in my goal of seeking some representation for my anticipated story. Reply to: JoeBauer6@aol.com



Reciting Shakespeare, Defining Moment:

Back in the 1966/67 school year our sophomore English class teacher Mr. O'Shaunessey got tired of me and my ruffian/shared-rough-childhood friends not getting serious about reading parts in our class recital of " A Midsummer Nights Dream".
 
He eventually stopped the reading and ordered us all out when we continually disrupted the class with our reluctance to read and snickers . These were my hang-around buddies...and they did get up and simply walked out. I remained seated. A couple of them turned and looked at me as if to say "hey, what are you waiting for?" I looked back at them... unable to say anything.

Up to now these guys were my companions. We somehow found each other after finding out we all came from abusive homes. To mask our insecurities and anger and shame of our shared humiliating home lives, I believe my fellow fearful friends and I assumed this fake, collar up, tough guy image at school to convince ourselves and others that not only could we take it but that we were also worthy of some kind of respect, even if it was just an assumed fear type: "Oh, there goes those tough guys." "Watch Out!"

This beat the real and true and unattractive image we feared most ..." Oh, there goes those scared, sad and screwed up kids from those screwed up families."

So reading the part of Puck was not easy for me and my buddies who were trying so hard to keep up this defensive "I'm a bad guy" image.

However, it was at this "get out" moment ( a very unexpected and sound stopping moment) that something outwardly silent yet inwardly volcanic just "erupted" out of my troubled heart, mind and soul.

At that fateful moment without understanding why, I just "refused" to get up out of that seat. Something deep in inside of me was stopping me from walking away and "not" being part of something that I just unknowingly knew and felt was important and beautiful and gentle and touching....and desired.  Why I, the angry suffering tough guy, hungered for and felt that reading Shakespeare was this important... more than my loyalty to my suffering band of brothers...I didn't know...but something strong and unexplainable just compelled me to stay in that seat... to stay in that seat and fight to shove my great burning, barren and lonely life, anger and dispair about everything far far away from me. It was strange, scary and confusing all at the same time and I think I may have been a little sweaty and nauseous.  But I stayed in that seat.

My English teacher Mr. O'Shaunessey saw me remain in my seat and after an eye brow raised pause of surprise and in front of the rest of the class said something like.." Mr. Bauer...Your friends have left...why haven't you?" With my eyes looking down and my ego confused and my anger being gripped I mumbled something like " I don't know."

Mr. O'Shaunessey then said to me sternly ( as if to call my perhaps class attention seeking game or bluff ) " Mr. Bauer..if you remain in that seat...I am going to call on you more often than anyone in this class to read...I am going to call on you more often to comment on what we are reading...and I am going to have you be the first to give your oral reports on the books I ask you to read." " Are you sure you want to stay?" I nodded slowly... yes.

I could not release and "scream"  the real answer I often wanted to give in a roar like a wounded lion face to face at teachers and Mr. O'Shaunessey who had chastised me about my bad attitude and poor work habits...that " How the hell would you like to live the kind of life and nights that I am living!" answer!  How the hell would "you" like to try to get into your school kid studys and homework and feel like reading Shakespeare the next day after countless terrifying nights where you slept maybe 3 shakey hours in absolute, soul exhausting fear in a see-your-breath cold garage while your mother and brothers and you was being threatened and belittled and beaten in your house..and the only reason your shameful cowardly ass wasn't bruised up itself was because you could run fast and hide in a garage!    
 
Answer that Mr.O'Shaunessey!
 
You Bastard! You Bastard!  You dare ask me why I might not want to do my homework or read Shakespeare?

And yet...I did. I did want to read Shakespeare. And you have no idea..you have absolutely NO FUCKING IDEA...how much I truly wanted to read romantic and fun and gentle and mind stimulating and relaxing Shakespeare...so much more than to having to wallow and drain in exhausting fear and back tensing dread e-v-e-r-y fucking day about each next horrific humiliating night!  I would count the hours and dwell on and have to gear up my mind and body defense mechanisms for each new nights madness of boozy often bloody battles and loud and embarrassing cussing chaos. And these nerve wracking nightmares could go on until the early hours of the morning.  That's where my energy and motivation went instead of homework and enthusiastic days at school teachers. That's where it went.
 
Yes teachers, you have no idea I am living in this barren, shameful and draining hell. But how could you? How could you? And I am so tired...of expecting you to know...or to care that I do. And I know now that it just ain't going to happen. And it never did.

I am going to read Shakespeare...yes, yes I am.
Because I want to...and I am good enough... and I am smart enough...and I am appreciative enough.   And nobody ...no terror, no monster, no anger, no fear, no sadness about everything or even you Mr. O'Shaunessey is going to stop me from reading Shakespeare!

I lost my tough friends that day... really, I did. They never hung around me again after that day. And the rest of my time in that class was one of the most challenging things I ever had to go through in the middle of surviving that maddening domestic violence, spirit busting war/hell I was living through at home.

I had to start going to our local library at night and reading the books Mr. O'Shaunessey assigned us. I had to be ready with my lines the next day; actually read them and recite them to myself so that they came out quickly and in pace with the story to keep it flowing and not make me look like an illiterate fool in class. I had to somehow block out my obsessive thoughts about what was probably happening to my mother and brothers at the hands of my drunk and getting meaner-by-the -hour stepfather while I was in this uncomfortably quiet and seemingly less important world of calm book readers and spinster Librarians.

I had to prepare at least a rough outline for my scheduled oral reports and face the almost as great insecurity I had of knowing that I would have to get up in front of the class with a horribly broken out, acne scarred face that crushed my spirits and self esteem at times as much as my violent home life. I think the stress, lack of sleep and bad eat-in-a rush diet of sandwiches and cookies and liquor store snacks was greatly to blame for this scourge of teenage acne. And boys couldn't cover this up with make up as most girls could. My God, how did I ever get through that as well?

But I did those oral reports, I read those books, I kept up my parts in Shakespeare...I even gave a little flair to my speaking roles and smiled once or twice at my bravery and hamming.

And for the first time in a long time...I got an "A" in a class. When I got that report card, I cried to myself...because I knew how hard it was to achieve.
But no pats on the back, no "good job son." but that was alright...I knew. I knew I had done something special. I only wished I had had a soft, gentle girlfriend to have shared this achievement with.

And you know what? A couple of years later when I was a senior. Mr. O'Shaunessey's daughter who was two or three years younger than I came up to me in one of our school hallways and said"are you Joe Bauer?" After telling her I was, she went on to tell me about how her father would occasionally mention this one student in all of his classes that effected him enough to tell this following story:

A story of how he surprisingly watched a young man give up his friends and his tough guy persona...in one moment...to become a real contributing and thoughtful student in his class. And of how he was tougher on this student and how he was inspired to give this student an "A" for his hard work and determination."

"What ever he told his family...I knew it must have been special and memorable enough for Mr. O'Shaunessey's daughter Katie to remember it and feel it was worth coming up to me and tell me about him doing so.

That was sure an inspiring, feel-good day for me...to finally know that someone other than myself had actually recognized and appreciated that unbelievably lonely, gut wrenching, bravery searching effort I was making to redefine my life and being despite everything that was happening all around me.

Joe Bauer

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