When My Father Faced An Emergency

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Hand-drawn art by Rupali Bhuva
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Someone asked me once if I had ever seen my father in an emergency situation, and if I might describe how he dealt with it. At the time I replied that I had never witnessed him in any danger, or in an emergency. But later I remembered that I had. The fact of my not recalling the emergency is significant.

We were in the car. Driving to my riding lesson. At that time we lived in Big Sur, California. If you have ever had the pleasure or terror of driving the Big Sur coastline on Highway One, you will know that the two-lane road is characterized by majestic mountains on one side and steep, death-defying cliffs that plummet down to the Pacific Ocean on the other. We had an old dirty white Volkswagen Van. It was the ’70s, we were a hippy family and I was a long-legged, scraggly, mountain child, about 10 years old. I was in the backseat, free to roam around as there were no seat belts back then. My father was driving, and while it is not part of this story let me just say he was one of the worst drivers ever. He was always busy looking at the whales in the sea, or spotting hawks. Terrible.

As we drove up the coast, we passed a hitchhiker on the side of the road who had his thumb out. He was a young man with a big backpack. A traveler. My father, ever the anthropologist, was interested in travelers, and in people in general. He liked to pick up hitchhikers. He liked to have conversations with strangers. So we picked up this fellow.

A few minutes later as we were driving along the man suddenly had a knife in my father’s side. He was demanding money; he was pumping with adrenaline.

I think this qualifies as an emergency. A two-lane road with nowhere to pull over. A kid in the back seat, and it would be another 30 years before the invention of the mobile telephone.

But I never noticed. I did not see the emergency because my father’s response was to cheerfully look down at the knife and then into the eyes of the hitchhiker and say in his most droll Englishness, “Well hello, what have we here?”

He was authentically calm and amused. His interest in the desperate young man had actually increased several fold by this communication, (i.e. a knife and monetary demands). My father began to ask him questions. How had he come to be in Big Sur? How had he found himself in such a muddle? Through these questions and, more importantly, the tone of the questions, my father was listening and learning about how someone can get in such a twist. He was not applying a psychological trick or a technique. This was not a manipulation. He was not ‘trying’ to calm the guy down. He was just interested, one human being to another. His curiosity in the young man was piqued, and his inquiry reflected that. He did not see a knife… he saw a person with a story.

How would most people react? Would they fight, would they try to get the money to him right away? Would they try to trick him? What are the scenarios that immediately play out? For most of us, a knife in our side would be a moment of panic. This was an emergency. But somehow it was not. As a passenger in the back seat of the van I watched their interaction and never for one second felt fear in the car. There was no spike in the drama, no flutter of breath, no indication of danger at all. I still do not think of that afternoon as being life-threatening, though surely it was.

After driving another half an hour we came to a place where we would have to drop off our hitchhiker and deliver me to my horseback-riding lesson. When we pulled off the road my father opened his wallet and gave the young man a $20 bill. He wrote our home phone number on a scrap piece of paper from the floor of the car and gave the guy a hug. My father suggested that the man call if he found himself in trouble. These were not idle generosities to suggest good will. He was not faking it. The warmth and the care he felt for the traveler was genuine. I could feel that, and so, apparently, could the hitchhiker. All three of us learned a great deal from that half an hour in the VW van.

As I look back now at that situation I can only say that I hope one day to be able to see context as well as my father did. He was not young when this story took place. He was maybe 74 years along in his practice of seeing more than just the tip of the knife. I suppose it takes time to be able to respond to an acute situation with love that stems from complexity… or is it the other way around: complexity that stems from love?

Perhaps there is no beginning to that loop. I will start by noticing my reactions, and searching for wider, deeper edges to the complexity I am reacting to, responding to—and shift that into mutual learning.

Seed Questions for Reflection

How do you understand love that stems from complexity, or complexity that stems from love? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to respond to a dangerous situation with warmth and genuine curiosity? What helps you 'see more than just the tip of the knife'?

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10 Past Reflections
MA
Mar 12, 2024
I think love from complexity is divine Grace! And complexity from love is.. is that too a form of Grace? That allows us to appreciate life, love, complexity and grow ? I can't really think of a dangerous situation but there was a time when I was disillusioned with my work and was violent in my thinking about the setup and the supervisor and her supervisor. In a fit of rage and disappointment, I submitted my paper and was sure my supervisor would face the music from higher ups who had to accept the resignation. Meanwhile my supervisor seemd to have sensed that and she fell sick and had to be admitted for High BP. Though my team members said she was a drama queen and I need not worry, I thought as a fellow human I would do what was in my control and I withdrew my application without mentioning any reasons. My supervisor got better but because of my withdrawal her supervisor labelled me erratic, whimsical and I was denied promotion that year despite stellar performance. I was disap... View full comment
MT
Mar 1, 2024
We had an experience one night. My dad stopped the car to chase after a man running after a man. Only later did we find out that somehow the man gave my father the knife and all three knelt to pray together. Things like this happened a lot with my father.
RA
Feb 7, 2024
what a way to respond with love, calm and curosity. i have found myself in this postion before when i witnessed a theif being hurdeled around and i stepped in to ease the pain of the theif. this is a good memory for me that i would not of gathered had not i read the story and been asked the question.
AP
Feb 6, 2024
Godliness reflected just as a caring mother for her child.
Evoked hearty feelings to reach such tranquility by sheer will to be helpful to anyone in need.
AW
Feb 6, 2024
I have no story but want to share my gratitude for reading this memory and being reminded not to get sucked into being reactive and caught in the drama. THANK YOU
SN
Feb 5, 2024
Oh, I love this story! It is beautiful and I totally understand. It reminds me of my grandmother, who was born in 1899 and lived to be 98. Her personality was the opposite of your father - she was matter-of-fact and had an air of confidence & strength about her - but she treated everyone the same. You felt respected (or scared if you were a small child) when she addressed you because she would be right to the point and with an insightful observation. I was the scared small child around her when I was 6-8 years old, but when I was 16-18 years old, I lived with her. She hadn't changed, I had. And I found her matter-of-fact strength to be the first truly unconditional love I'd ever experienced. She didn't judge - she offered her insightful view. Yes, she was ahead of her time. Years later, in her 90's, she had a map of the middle east on her kitchen cabinets -long before computers or internet - because she was trying to keep track of which countries bordered whic countries. Sh... View full comment
DD
David Doane Feb 6, 2024
How fortunate you are to have had and still have a grandmother like that in your life.
DD
Feb 3, 2024
Love is the oneness of all that is. All that is abounds in complexities. Complexities stem from love in that love includes the complexities of all that is. A personal story: In 1970, I was at Mardi Gras with a couple buddies. We were moving along in a big crowd, halfway drunk, and a guy pulled a knife on us and wanted money. I was feeling warmth and happiness, I doubt I was feeling curiosity, and in a moment of crazy without thinking joking I said, "I'm with him," pointing to the guy with the knife. He look bewildered, turned and walked away from us. It was a moment of me being real and spontaneous and crazy that derailed that scary dangerous happening and saved us from what could have been. I could have been killed. I didn't do what I did with purpose. I couldn't do it on purpose. I couldn't do it again. Lastly, what helps me see more than the tip of the knife is being sure there is more than the tip, wanting to see the more, maybe being in an usual state, and opening my... View full comment
JP
Feb 2, 2024
Life is complex. Life has many threads. Life has many beads. Life has many leveles. Life has many colors like a rainbow. The musical instrument of life has seven sound notes. When we see these differences without eyes covered by seperatededness, we see the underlying oneness or indivisible unity or harmony. And that is pure love. Thus there is oneness in manyness. Pure unselfish love stems from complexity. Likewise complexity stems from love. It's like branches steming from a deep rooted tree. When we look at differences with coloered eyes the differences divide us and cause violence and destruction. It all depends upon how clear our vision is. How we view others different from us. When we realte to others with clear mind and clear heart life becomes hrmonious. It has taken time for me to move in the direction of harmony and unconditional love and acceptance. Walking on the path brings deep joy, fulfillmemnt, oneness and bliss in me. There are two ways of looking at the knife in our... View full comment
ST
Feb 2, 2024
Ahhh! I have a personal story of be accosted by a robber with a gun and showing empathy and ending up listening to his story of childhood abuse and a close friend’s story of being intentional hit by a car by a man who then began to rape her at gun point and when she showed him empathy he stopped , cried, told his story of his father abusing his sisters, promised to never do this again and turned himself into police.
What helps me see more than the tip of the knife is remembering that I am just human like any other and I have all of the fear , anger, and whatever else is behind the violent threat of the knife in me and that what I want and need is what everyone wants and needs. Love.