Tribal, The Prequel Ch3

No price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself.

Friedrich Nietzsche

Sweat poured off of my face in tiny rivers of salty regret. Tears stung my eyes as I made my way up the rolling hills covered in shoulder-high grass with patches of towering trees running aimlessly across the hillside. The mountain was crisscrossed with narrow trails left by eons of travelers and their domesticated animals. Most of their destinations no longer existed. I had no map, only the memory of the terrain study Hector and I had gone over countless times. The ground always looks different once you stand on it and figure out which trail to take, which to avoid, and just where the hell am I anyway?

A blistering sun and heavy humidity forced me into a slow meandering pace. I felt like I was back home in Florida during August, except this was steep climbing, and we didn’t have a lot of mountains in Florida. The forest edge provided a space between where the grass started and the forest thickened. It was shady and welcoming. The direction I intended to go was up to the ridge line, where I would stay overnight and observe the far mountain, my destination, and the valley below.

Human traffic patterns were the critical information I needed. Avoiding people until I reached the tribal village was a way of avoiding unpleasantries alone, a stranger in an area of wild country on the border with Cambodia, a lawless land too dense and mountainous to appeal to the lowlanders.

The Montagnards were an eclectic group of tribes with widely different origins, languages, and cultures. They were all lumped together by the French. Montagnard is french for Mountaineer. The people of the mountains. America had recruited some of the tribes to help them interdict the Ho Chi Minh trail that acted like a supply line for the North and Viet Cong. The tribes were very good at their job but suffered a lot during the war and especially after America abandoned them to their fate.

The hill tribes had wisely assimilated under northern control. They asked for autonomy to live as their ancestors had without demanding lands or separate states. Now the villages thrive culturally and are integrated with the modern Vietnamese culture of the large cities and local government offices. Montagnard supported tourism in the larger settlements and wore traditional clothes or the latest fashion depending on the day and purpose. They were modernizing, and the future would see them dwindle as the tribes slowly surrendered to progress. Great swaths of their ancestral lands were clear-cut for timber, mined for minerals, and turned into collective farms that grew as far as the eye could see.

My job was to ask them to help me observe these changes to the cultural and natural conservancy. Still, my work would fuel American trade agreements and the voracious appetites of land eater nations. I was a pawn in the military branch that served the goals of the Bilderberg Group. I knew none of this. I was trained to accept missions and ask what the objective was. Questioning motives were far more dangerous than the missions.

At the top of the ridge, the whole world of this magic land of Tigers and Dragons opened up into a giant rolling ocean of emerald green with seafoam of golden straw and blue skies turning to a dark purple in the distance at the curve of the earth. I watched as birds worked the treetops like elegant fairies. The songs of earth and wind, birds, hidden in the canopy, and creatures of all makes and models collided in my ears and held me spellbound.

My strange desire to live alone in the great grandfather forest overtook me again. I felt genuinely free owing nothing but my life to myself. Equally strange was my desire to share this life with someone who would love it as much as I. I knew that was not possible, but the ache never left me.

I set up my camp under a gnarled tree with low umbrella-like branches. I moved the stones to a makeshift fire ring and filled the space with grass and small bunches of leaves. This made a comfortable bed and gave me good observation and cover to conceal my presence. I decided not to light a fire for cooking this night until I was more sure of my location.

After a cold meal of prepared fish, rice, and millet, I finished nearly all of my water, then settled in to watch and learn. I awoke in the night, freezing my love to be alone ass off. It was cold in the highlands at night; now I knew just how frosty it got. I pulled my beloved girlfriend and poncho liner out of my pack, wrapped up in her soft, insulated embrace, and shivered back to sleep. God had the infantry in his heart when he made poncho liners. It was a prized possession, always friendly and accommodating regardless of my mood.

21 responses to “Tribal, The Prequel Ch3”

  1. There you are, a pawn to the hegemony, where “Questioning motives were far more dangerous than the mission” yet given the opportunity to live in the jungle and explore the great wild, feeling “genuinely free owing nothing but my life to myself.” I can hear the radio playing Creedence Clearwater Revival protest songs in the background as you hiked up the trail. I too have felt this sense of freedom but something always dragged me back from the wild. Was it a woman? The comfort of a couch in front of a t.v. Or simply culture? You returned…but look what happened to this who didn’t. I think of Colonel Walter E. Kurtz played by Marlon Brando in Apocalypse now: He stayed to live his freedom…but the hegemony allows no escape from this culture.
    A great glimpse into your life and experiences Hype. Keep ’em coming. And never lose sight of the magic land of Tigers and Dragons.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      Excellent commentary. I was a big fan of Creedence Clearwater and still listen to them fondly or other singers doing their songs. They did sort of define the times. Col Kurtz went full on native and would have been gloriously sucessful had the hegemony not declared him persona non grata and like Russia, silenced the dissent. Like you the animal in me loved the outdoors and the challenge. I wasn’t a big fan of sitting on the couch drinking to oblivion and living vicariously through various football heroes. That was not what my Viking genes called for. My family never recovered from King Harold of Norway getting his ass kicked by English mongrels. So we struck out on our own Viking adventures and ended up in America during the 1600’s. Damn that was serious adventure. So, here I am all packed full of Viking adventure genes and not enough sense to stay on the couch and watch football. Being low man on the scrotum pole has its adventures but it is heresy to shout up the pole and tell all those weenie boys to stop pooping on your head. That’s how random explosives go off under your donkey. I’m going to tell both stories. My story at the bottom and the results at the top. To be forewarned is to be fore armed.

      Liked by 2 people

  2. Amazing to me there’s an entire generation of young, bright adults who don’t know of nor remember the Vietnam war, the draft, or Nixon. Well, they DO have their own drama I must admit.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      Yes indeed. Time has nearly erased that epic period that secretly changed the eastern world. We have never won a declared war with an Asian nation. We managed to get back to the 38th parallel in the Korean War, we got our butts whipped in Vietnam, and now we want to pick a fight with China. I’m thinking that’s a bad idea. Part of staying alive is knowing who not to be a jackass with. I was drafted but Nixon saved my butt by shutting down the bleed. I did some wandering and then rejoined in 82 to fight the Soviet Orcs. That evolved into all kinds of wild adventures after the Soviet Union dissolved and it was a free for all across the globe. Now it appears we are at the starting line once again.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. I’m captivated by the splendor of this far off land, “ ocean of emerald green with seafoam of golden straw and blue skies turning to a dark purple in the distance at the curve of the earth”, I’ve journeyed through the forests lead by your enchanting images far from the flatlands of Florida. How can you bear the stillness of solitude , the cold night’s darkness? This is a beautifully written invitation to follow this exciting yet fearful travel to a destination, both eager to arrive yet fearful of what awaits us. Dan, I am counting on you to take us along ,to allow us to experience this awesome adventure. It is thrilling.

    Liked by 3 people

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      Thank you so much Rene! I have held all of this secret for decades. Some parts are difficult to deal with years after it was long gone but what I remember with great affection is the country and it’s people. The tribal lands most of all. They came from all over the world before governments and international trade existed and no one left. They all stayed and I discovered why. I’ll take you to every land I went to. We are going out of sequence, but come along and see what I have seen but with less bugs and more beauty.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I intend to follow every adventure and experience you share. I feel it will serve us well. Not incidentally your writing is eloquent and so beautiful. I’ll be traveling along on this lifetime journey and thank you for allowing this outsider in.

        Liked by 2 people

        1. Hyperion Avatar
          Hyperion

          😊. I’m definitely happy to have you along. I’ve never travelled In this literary world with a better companion. We see the earth with deep oceanic Pisces eyes connected directly to the heart.

          Liked by 1 person

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      Whoopie! I didn’t make it to Woodstock but I definitely remember that song and there was so much truth in those lyrics but we couldn’t see it, especially if one was a volunteer. I remember when my older brother got drafted and he cried like a baby and I thought, you puss, Dad needs to whip your ass. Then I got my notice and just read that welcoming letter and thought. Karma is real. I deserved this. Well it all turned out okay for me and my brother. We made it to our late 60’s and both of us were supposed to die at 65 according to the insurance company actuary tables. Ha ha ha! Not yet my friend. Maybe tomorrow, but not now.

      Liked by 2 people

  4. The hegemony marches on, unchanged, trampling all in its path.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      Indeed it does and I believe that the hegemony will make the fatal mistake all hegemonies make. The people have a vote whether the hegemony allows it or not. Now, we wait for the voice from the void to steer us en masse to our destiny.

      Like

  5. Excellent post, I love your artist’s eye—the colors of the landscape sound amazing. Thank God for that poncho, I love reading your stories.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      Thank you Judy! I’ve come a long way since those days but I’ll recount them as it was through my youthful eyes. I still have that poncho liner. It’s old as dirt and well used but still ready for more adventure. We attached them to the inside of our poncho and made a light sleeping bag that was good for keeping the rain off of you. We could also make a small tent from the poncho. And of course I still have that poncho. They can tell my story better than I can. I have many crystal memories of my tribal days and I even found a Korean tribe that lived on the same mountain where the ruins of the early palace was. No one ever went up there but me and I found them to be God’s best children. They were very interested in me because they never met a foreigner before. I tell that story as well.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Hyperion Avatar
        Hyperion

        The palace ruins were from the Choson Dynasty and this mountain was part of the Pusan Perimeter where many battles were fought. The North Koreans used the mountain top and the walls of the ruins to set up artillery to shell the American and South Korean lines. Later the palace was further destroyed by allied bombing and in 1990 it was still left completely untouched. The tribe lived on the mountain near Waegwan and the Han River. I visited then all the time and we always had a great village chat and the women would make a delicious tea for us. I even drank homemade beer with the men. I assumed this was a tribal village that preferred to live the old way because modern life was all around but no one disturbed them.

        Like

      2. So cool that you still have the poncho liner, it’s better than gold :). I look forward to hearing your stories, especially about the Korean tribe. Awesome :).

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Hyperion Avatar
          Hyperion

          I’ll look forward to telling up you about this wonderful experience.

          Liked by 1 person

  6. Nature is as much a figure in your tale as you and the people are. I think I’d feel lonely, yet at the same time, it seems like it wouldn’t be impossible not to.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      Hi Hetty! Thank you. Your observation is spot on. In the first half of my life I did not know what introversion was. I found all of my necessities in life within myself and that allowed me to do a lot of things in isolation that ruin the mental health of people who define themselves by their social circle. I was truly free in my mind and didn’t mind being alone. I preferred it. I still had a deep desire for a female companion to share the world I saw. This poignant desire was my Achilles heel and it would lead me to some of my greatest and most enduring heartbreak. I’ll confess it all.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. We all have our Achilles heel, that’s for damn sure…

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Hyperion Avatar
          Hyperion

          I don’t think the literary world will every run dry in that department. It’s a timeless and eternal story.

          Liked by 1 person

Leave a comment