Spring comes late to Howell Mountain. Pacific Union College sits above the Napa fog, and in March 1980 the grass on the ball field still holds the cold past nine in the morning. I am thirteen. I came to America in June 1977, eleven years old, off the plane from Australia, and in three years on this mountain I have learned one thing about myself with no room for doubt. I cannot hit a softball. I swing and miss. I foul it off my own foot. The other boys watch me the way they watch a kid who will lose them the inning.
Chuck Evans runs the program. He coaches basketball and volleyball and golf, and he has built the athletics here from close to nothing. That morning he walks over and stands behind me and says little. He moves my hands down the bat. He tells me how to swing straight. He tells me to watch the ball onto the bat and to swing straight. Step, he says. Don’t lunge.
Later that day I come to the plate during recess and I hit the ball farther than I have hit anything. It carries and then it’s caught. I’m out, but my classmates turn to each other. “Wow,” one of them says. “What happened to Luke?”
What happened was Chuck Evans. To see what he did, you have to see what he holds sacred, and a sacred thing has no meaning outside the world that made it sacred.
Ernest Becker (1924-1974) argued in The Denial of Death that men build hero systems to outrun the knowledge that they die. A hero system hands a man a script. Honor these things, do these things, and your small life joins something the grave cannot reach. Becker thought every culture sells this same product under a different label, the feeling that a man counts in a scheme larger than his own flesh. Religion sells it. The nation sells it. So does the gym, and so does the ball field.
Chuck’s hero system has a name. He teaches exercise science at a Seventh-day Adventist college, and in that world the body carries a weight that most American gyms never set on it. Paul tells the Corinthians their bodies house the Holy Spirit. Ellen White (1827-1915) built a health message into the center of the faith, and out of it came Loma Linda and the vegetarian table and the long Adventist habit of treating diet and rest and exercise as duties owed to God rather than as private taste. The school down the hill teaches the whole man, mind and body and spirit, because the faith promises that God raises the body and does not discard it. A clumsy boy at the plate, then, holds something on loan from his Maker. The flesh has a design. Training honors the design. To stand behind a kid and fix his swing is to tend a temple, and the work counts because the One who issued the body will ask for an accounting of it.
This puts Chuck at a strange line, and the line tells you who he is. Adventism grew up wary of worldly ambition. The reward sits in the next life, not in a trophy case, and a faith that keeps the Sabbath against the whole calendar of American sport has reason to distrust the Saturday game and the roar of the crowd and the man who lives for the win. American athletics runs on the opposite engine. It crowns the victor. It keeps the record. It teaches a boy that he counts when he beats another boy. Chuck spends his career at the joint where these two systems grind against each other, and he has made a living smoothing the friction. He gives seminars on ethics in athletics. He sits on the Angwin Community Council. The man who reconciles two hero systems for a living must believe in both, and must believe that the body can serve God and still keep score, that competition can build a man rather than corrode him, that the coach answers to a higher official than the umpire.
Hold that word, fitness, and watch it change shape as it passes from his world into others, because the same word names a different god in each.
A Marine drill instructor uses the word and means a body hardened into a tool of the state. Fitness for him is the load carried, the mile run under fire, the readiness to kill and to keep his men alive. The body belongs to the Corps before it belongs to the man, and a soft body betrays the unit. His immortality runs through the flag and the brotherhood, and the recruit who breaks down on the third mile threatens both.
A competitive bodybuilder uses the same word and means symmetry under stage light. Fitness for him is the photographed peak, the line of the deltoid, the proof of will written on the surface where the judges can read it. He starves and dehydrates himself for one afternoon of display, and he calls the wreck of that afternoon health because the system he serves rewards the image and not the man inside it. His grab at immortality runs through the photo, the trophy, the body frozen at its best the day before it begins again to fade.
A Carthusian monk in his cell hears the word and flinches. The body for him is the lower self, the appetite that drags the soul down, the thing to be subdued by fast and silence and the cold floor at the hour of vigil. Fitness barely registers, and where it registers it tempts. He starves the flesh to feed the spirit, the reverse of the man on Howell Mountain who feeds the flesh to glorify its Maker. Both men kneel. They kneel at opposite altars.
A Silicon Valley biohacker says fitness and means a dashboard. Resting heart rate, sleep stages, glucose curves, the long bet against death itself. He does not want the resurrection of the body. He wants to never need one. He tracks his markers and swallows his compounds and chases the year when a man might stop dying, and his hero system makes the most literal grab at immortality of them all, a refusal to hand the body back at the end.
An aging ballerina uses the word and means line. Fitness for her is the held arabesque, the turnout, the body bent past its natural limit into grace, and the cruelty of her system shows in the calendar. Her temple decays on a schedule the monk and the coach can ignore. The thing she worships leaves her first.
The boy at the plate carries his own freight, and none of these men can read it. I had crossed an ocean and lost a country and learned that I was no good at the games American boys play, which on a small mountain campus is most of what a boy has. The diamond was a court where I kept losing. Chuck did not see a hopeless case, because his world holds no hopeless bodies. Every body answers to patient training, since every body comes from the same hand and goes back to it. He did not give me a pep talk. He moved my hands and told me to watch the ball, and the small mercy of that morning was theological before it was athletic. He treated a clumsy immigrant kid as a thing worth fixing, because in his system nothing made by God is past fixing.
Becker would point out the rest. A man wants to leave something the grave cannot take. Chuck holds no great record of his own that the world remembers. He has something better suited to his system. He has the bodies he trained and the men they grew into, and he has a swing he corrected on a cold morning forty-five years ago that the man who owns it still tells stories about. That is the coach’s immortality, and it runs through other people’s flesh. He fixed a thousand of these. Most of them he has forgotten. The work outlives the memory of the work.
I love talking sports with Chuck. I love it now the way I loved it then, and the love has the same root. For one morning a man who believed my body was worth his trouble took the trouble, and the ball carried, and the boys turned around. He thinks he taught me to hit. He taught me that someone was watching who did not think I was a lost cause. In his hero system, no one is.
