The ball goes up and Craig goes up after it. No matter how fast I run nor how high I jump, Craig always soared above me that day and he always caught the ball.
Forty two years have gone by. I can still see him soaring above me into a deep blue sky.
He was pretty fly for a white guy.
We play touch football on a Saturday afternoon in Auburn in 1984, both of us in our final months of high school. He goes to the Sacramento Adventist academy and he’s an A student. I go to Placer High and I’m a B student. Craig follows the rules in everything and he wins in everything and his cockiness is so subtle, you don’t resent it, you admire it because he earns it. He could be obnoxious but he isn’t. His family hosts me for many a Sabbath. I never host Craig. My home embarrasses me.
My job that afternoon is to cover Craig van Rooyen, who plays wide receiver. I bump him at the line. He runs past me. I play off him to take away the deep route. He runs under it and brings it down and runs past me. I try everything a seventeen-year-old knows, and a few things I invent on the spot, and none of it works. The other team throws to Craig all day because they have watched me fail to stop him and they are not stupid. I spend the afternoon looking up. He spends it in the air.
There’s a blonde girl on my team. She’s two years younger. A great body. A few weeks before, she taught me how to kiss on a Saturday night in the loft of Dr. Zane Kime’s home. She would glide her lips on mine and her tongue would dart around my mouth and then dance with mine. In five minutes, I went from a boy who didn’t know how to kiss to a boy with a PhD in kissing.
The previous girl who kissed me just jammed her tongue down my throat and I was so unnerved, I barely talked to her for the next three years of high school. She became mayor.
I never saw the blonde again but I transmitted everything she gave me over the next few decades. While women have registered many complaints about me (chiefly that I don’t put much effort into relationships, I guess I’m a typical Aussie male), they never complain about my kissing.
I have not seen Craig since our final game. Next I knew he was working as a journalist in San Francisco circa 1994. Then he went to UCLA School of Law, took an MFA in poetry at Pacific University, and sits now as a trial judge in San Luis Obispo, hearing criminal cases that run from a suspended license to murder. He writes poems that appear in the good journals. None of it surprises me. The boy who caught everything became a man who rises in two professions at once, and I am still, in a manner of speaking, on the ground, watching him go up.
This is an essay about Craig’s hero systems, and I read them through Ernest Becker (1924-1974).
Becker’s argument in The Denial of Death is this. A man knows two things no animal knows. He knows he will die, and he suspects that while he lives he might not matter. The first terror is the grave. The second is the worse one, the fear that he might pass through his whole span and leave no mark on the cosmos, that he might be a creature and nothing more. Culture answers both at once. Culture hands each man a hero system, a set of tasks and prizes that promise him a feeling of cosmic value if he performs them. Do this and you will have mattered. Do this and some part of you will outlast the body. A hero system lets a man deny death without admitting he is denying anything.
A man can serve more than one. The trouble starts when they pull against each other.
Craig grows up inside the most literal hero system on offer. He comes of age in an Adventist home in the seventies and eighties, the same world I half belong to. His father, Smuts van Rooyen, holds a doctorate and pastors Adventist congregations, and for a time works for my father, Desmond Ford (1929-2019), at Good News Unlimited. I never saw my father so excited about a hire. He jumped in the air when he announced it. Smuts is a spell-binding preacher and writer and his three children surely make him proud. The Adventist promise carries no metaphor. The dead sleep. The King returns. The graves open and the faithful rise to meet Him in the air. Death comes, and then death gets undone. Every Sabbath rehearses the rescue.
Then Craig subtracts the literal God. I read it in his poems. One of them stages a father whose small daughter points at the figure on his T-shirt and asks if it is God. The father lies and says yes. The figure is Bob Marley (1945-1981). The poem turns on the longing for a picture of God a man might keep in his wallet next to the snapshots of the kids, and on the absence of any such picture, and on a reggae beat standing in for a liturgy he can no longer sing straight. Craig keeps the rhythm and loses the doctrine. He keeps the waiting and loses the One waited for. There is his subtraction story. He carries the ache of the Adventist hero system into rooms where the doctrine holds no standing, the courtroom and the poem. He shops a manuscript he calls Extinction Picnic.
The word to watch in Craig’s life is grace.
In his father’s world grace has a hard technical edge. Grace is unmerited pardon. The sinner cannot earn his standing and does not try. He receives. The quarrel that cost my father his place in the church turned on this word, on whether God saves by grace alone or keeps a ledger of each believer’s record and audits it in a heavenly court. My father argued for grace against the ledger and lost his standing. Smuts rejoined the church and did right by his family. Craig grows up watching two men he loves take grace to mean two different prices.
Carry the word into other lives and watch it change shape.
For a grower in the Edna Valley, grace is the season. He prunes and trains and waters, and then the weather decides. A run of warm nights in September gives him a vintage he could not have commanded with any amount of work. Grace is the gift the labor cannot force. His hero system is the vineyard, and what tells him he has not wasted his years is the great year that arrives unearned.
For a session drummer holding a one-drop reggae beat, grace is the pocket. He drops the kick on the third beat and leaves the first empty, and when the timing lands the whole room leans. He cannot fully explain the timing and cannot teach it past a point. Grace is the beat that sits right. His hero system is the groove, and the groove either blesses him or it does not.
For a hospice nurse, grace is the quiet death. She has watched the body fight and watched it let go, and she calls it a mercy when a man dies without the long struggle, when the breathing slows and stops and nothing tears. Grace is the easy crossing. Her hero system is the good death, and she counts her years by how many she has eased.
Each of these people would nod at the word and mean something the others might not recognize. Becker’s point holds. The sacred word is not one thing. It takes its content from the hero system that needs it, and it means what lets that hero feel his life carries weight.
Now set Craig in the middle of them. On the bench grace is a ration. He decides whether a man stays in custody or goes home to his family while the case waits, whether a conviction ends in probation or prison, whether a frightened witness gets heard. He calls it listening to the people in front of him and working out something that helps them. He worries on the bad days that the system he serves was built to mark certain men and shield the powerful. On the good days he thinks the law bends enough to do some good, if the men who apply it stay humble about the views they inherited and keep checking them. Grace here is discretion, bound by evidence, rationed by law, handed down from a man in a robe to a man who cannot see his face.
In the poem grace is the line that arrives on its own. Craig says a poem dies the moment the poet tidies the self on the page, the moment he grooms how he looks. The poem has to come up out of the body, the senses, the goosebump and the back-beat. He says the poem opens inside the reader and runs on past the last line and reaches no verdict. So the same man hands down verdicts all day from the bench and writes, at night, the one kind of speech that refuses to reach one. Grace on the bench is the right judgment. Grace in the poem is the held breath before any judgment, the door left open.
Becker kept his respect for the rare man who can watch his own hero system work and name it without flinching. Craig is that kind of man. He says outright that poetry and judging live in different worlds for him, and that he gets uncomfortable when they touch. He knows the robe turns him into a symbol, a head above a bench, a neutral surface that shows nothing but its reasoning. He knows the poem asks the reverse, the body uncovered, the self left raw. Most men run one hero system and mistake it for reality. Craig runs two that contradict each other and keeps the seam in view. He does not pretend the judge and the poet are the same man in different coats. He holds them apart on purpose and feels what the holding costs.
Three things to fix in place before I stop.
The shape of the hero. Craig rises. He rose on the field and he rose in the law and he rose in the journals, and the rising reads as grace in the old athletic sense, the body doing without strain what the rest of us cannot do with all our strain. Under the rising stands a man who lost the literal God of his childhood and kept the hunger that God once filled. He pours the hunger into the verdict and into the poem. He is the preacher’s son who became a judge, which is to say he took the family trade, the rendering of judgment, and moved it from the heavenly court his tradition placed above the clouds down to a courtroom on the Central Coast, where the stakes are a man’s liberty and the appeal goes to a higher court that is only a building in another city.
The unnamed rival. Every hero shapes himself against an enemy he might not name. Craig’s rival is the ledger. The accountant God who keeps the books, opens them in the judgment, and reads off the record. That God broke my father and parted Craig’s father from mine. Craig’s whole posture answers Him. The grace he rations on the bench, the verdict the poem withholds, the picture of God the daughter asks for and cannot get, all of it runs as a long argument with the One who keeps records. Behind the ledger stands the older rival, the grave, the thing the Adventist promise was built to defeat and the thing no robe and no poem defeats.
The cost the ledger cannot price. Craig pays in partition. He spends his working life as a symbol, covered in the robe, his face a surface, his body hidden behind the bench, neutral whatever it costs. The poet in him needs the body in full view. So he lives one life that depends on covering up and another that dies the moment he covers up, and he holds them apart with care, and the holding apart is the price. No docket shows it. He hands down grace all day and writes, at night, the speech that keeps the verdict back, and the man who does both cannot be one man in one room. I saw none of this from the field. From the field I saw the ball go up and Craig go up after it and the certainty that he would come down with it in his hands. I came down with nothing, that day, and I have turned it over for forty years, which is its own immortality project, the boy on the ground making the boy in the air into an essay so the afternoon will have meant something. Becker might recognize what I am doing here. He might let me do it anyway.
