Tribal, The Prequel Ch4

Cooking is at once child’s play and adult joy. And cooking done with care is an act of love.

Craig Claiborne
Flower Hmong Woman Eating Lunch, by JitenShaman, Cau Son, Vietnam

A solid gold lace cover of light bathed the countryside as the sun rose behind me. In the valley, fog flowed like a river from the highlands toward the southern tail of the Great Dragon. Hunger and thirst become powerful emotion that leads us to frenzy, and I awoke with a powerful ache for nourishment. Deepest was the ache of aloneness.

I look into the far distance of memory and see that day’s activity. Still, it is impossible not to filter the scene through the sieve of all I have learned since then. I see new visions with old eyes and a million experiences forming raindrops that fill a deep, placid lake at the feet of the stone I have become.

I went about preparing to light a small fire in a hasty dug pit inside the fire ring made the day before. This would keep the smoke and flicker of fire from alerting others of my presence. I wrapped the remainder of my fish and rice in leaves, placed it on the coals, and covered the fire with a flat rock and then clay. Maybe there were about 5 ounces of water left. I’d need much more before the day was over.

I always ate local foods and wore local clothes to help blend into the crowds of humanity that choked the world’s cities. I learned their customs and courtesies and went about my duties unassumingly. This enabled me to disappear in plain sight. It did not protect me from those trained to ferret out perceived human threats. Only my wits protected me from danger. On this mission, I carried no weapons except a Swiss Army knife, which I still have, and a local parang. The parang is a short blunt machete carried by all the men and women when they enter the forest. Often the parang was the difference between living and dying, so they were treasured tools handed down to generations.

After breakfast, I went about covering my tracks at the campsite and moved down the mountain a short distance to a covered area that kept me hidden from view. The location also gave me a clear vision of the vast wilderness in front of me. It would take a couple of hours to get down the mountain to the river below. From my position, I could see that it was rugged terrain to the west and south but flattened out to the north, where most of the human activity was.

I planned to find a way through the more rugged terrain to stay out of everyone’s way. Every plan has many tradeoffs, and I risked a lot just to stay hidden. An injury would be fatal unless I could self-rescue. I rested in a shaded area on a rock outcrop, and my mind wandered to Rudyard Kiplings, The Man Who Would Be King, written in 1888.

The moral of the story was as accurate in 1888 as it was in the late 1980s and even more true today. In this adventure story, two men convinced a tribe they were kings and took advantage of the natives’ superstitions. Later, they were found to be frauds, and one man was hanged and the other crucified. To his disbelief, the man crucified escaped to return to civilization. His wild account of the adventure earned him a bed in an insane asylum. When one achieves something dishonestly, they must suffer the consequences. What would my consequences be, I wondered?

An immediate need for drinkable water began to override all of my thoughts. I cut a few thick vines with my parang, got a few drops to wet my throat, and later found a dry stream bed that carried rainwater down the mountain. I started following the meandering cut in the hill until it leveled out in a massive ravine. The rocky bottom was filled with gravel and boulders as big as houses. At the base of one of the boulders, I dug down in the loose rock, hitting the sand, and a foot deeper, water began to seep into the hole. I was saved.

The urge to drink the muddy water was powerful. My mind whispered all kinds of reasons why the water was safe to drink. This is how one dies a miserable death from a disease that can eat you alive in hours instead of days. I had a stainless steel cup to bring up the water after it settled for 30 minutes. It was now clear enough to drink. I made another small fire and placed the cup in the coals to boil for a few minutes. The wait was excruciating. After the water cooled enough, I drank the cup and repeated the task three more times, filling my canteen and my stomach. This would get me to the river below, where I could get as much water as I needed.

24 responses to “Tribal, The Prequel Ch4”

  1. A moving episode of life’s dangers Dan. When we feel hungry, our bodies are telling us that we are in need. We need food. We must have water. We thirst for human companionship, I can feel the isolation in your journey. Absolutely lovely read. I love reading your journey.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      Thank you Rene. Perfect interpretation. The very basics of our needs become bold and we are compelled to answer. These needs can become our master quite quickly. There is an adult to child relationship one develops with the ever gnawing aches for sustenance of the mind, body, and soul and here is where we can stray with unwanted consequences. When we receive sustenance from our patience, self discipline, and hard work, we learn gratitude for the smallest gifts.

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      1. Perfectly expressed Dan, I couldn’t agree more.

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Hyperion Avatar
          Hyperion

          I’ll bloviate profusely on the theme as I go forward. 😁

          Liked by 1 person

          1. Bloviate to your hearts content. I love that, my imagination goes wild out there in the Far East jungle. 🌳🏔

            Liked by 1 person

            1. Hyperion Avatar
              Hyperion

              We have a bit more jungle adventure left before I make contact and the real fun begins. Don’t forget your bandana. Those miracle cloths have a gazillion uses.

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  2. Traipsing through the jungle hungry, thirsty, with nothing but a parang and a swiss army knife. I can’t help thinking with your wit and training you were as cunning and dangerous as Arnold in the movie Predator. All you needed to complete the look was the black, smudgy makeup to help you disappear. Determination? You got it! Waiting 30 minutes for that water to settle and be safe enough to drink must have felt like an eternity…but you grilled it out and survived! These stories of your actual life are great! You lived it! So glad you have the time and energy to share it…keep ’em comin’!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      LOL! My Swiss Army Knife was a dear friend that came in handy on a daily basis. I bet McGyver had the one with all the tools. I sharpened it so much the main blade looks like a tooth pick. It does seem a bit funny now. I can remember that if I gave more than three seconds to consider hunger or thirst, I’d crack and eat ants and drink squeezed grub juice and that would turn me into Gonad the Bavarian. I fought hard to never let that happen. My team used to tell me they feared me more than the opponent. They could take the overt hostility and deal with it but with me, I never showed my true emotions. I kept it light and then later, the toilet exploded when they sat down. We were a good group of misfits. I hated putting on that camouflage paint. I found if I used Army industrial strength bug repellent it melted the wax and made it easy to put on and it kept the bugs out of my face too. I remember we liked to put our camo on and look like Japanese demon clowns from Hell. I hope this doesn’t all seem pretentious and boring. These lone episodes to contact indigenous tribes became a specialty I was called to repeat several times and it was something I came to enjoy as a life changing view of a different world entirely. But dang bro, it could get desperate and scary at times.

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  3. Amazing and thrilling story. I like how you incorporated the cultural background and your thoughts of the moment into the experience. The water—patience truly is a virtue!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      You totally get it, Judy. Life in its many challenges can teach us all we seek if only we listen, observe, and learn.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I appreciate your adventurous spirit and insight.

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Hyperion Avatar
          Hyperion

          Thank you Judy! I better get busy and get another chapter out.

          Liked by 1 person

          1. Right on! 🙂

            Liked by 1 person

  4. Duuude….. I coulda sworn I commented on this. I remember saying something about the imagery. Maybe I didn’t hit the “send” button. Either way, I was drawn into the details. I like how you weave in your thoughts and that they’re about more than just what to eat.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      Wow! I thought you commented too. Did the WP Censor Bots mistake your much appreciated comment as an existential threat to their Happiness Engineers? Oh, wait…maybe it’s me they are after 🥸. Thank Hetty for revisiting. I do hope to weave much more into this story than the often mundane experiences of plodding along in foreign countries with a chronic paranoia of being hunted to extinction. The mission alone was a profound and life changing experience for me and it was the least challenging as far as real danger from armed conflict. I think that’s the reason I could relax and learn so much from people the world often disregards. But in the telling, I want to offer up the parallel story of how I evolved from a warrior ethos to a fumbly old grandpa full of stories to tell the kids. My hope is to someday become a worthy great grandpa. To me, that would be one hell of an achievement. 😇

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      1. I think you’re well on your way to being one hell of a worthy great grandpa. I’m glad I’m not crazy and really did comment. It sounds like your posts will prove to be a real fruitful work in progress. I hope you’re keeping the text together somewhere else so you can edit and add easily.

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Hyperion Avatar
          Hyperion

          Thank you Hetty, I’m looking forward to all the perks of being an eccentric patriarch of an extended family. My maternal grandfather was a total rascal who kept a family of raccoons under his house as pets. He taught me a lot about the rules and regulations for rowdy grandpa life. The number one rule was buy bourbon in the half gallon jugs. You never know when your elderly rascal friends will show up. I do keep my work on Google Docs and CD. Terrible things happen to your favorite works that reside only on WP. It’s about time to move forward with the story, so I better get busy trying to remember what it was I was trying to write about.

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          1. I never had a grandpa but I’m sure I’d have loved on who kept racoons!

            Liked by 1 person

            1. Hyperion Avatar
              Hyperion

              I was one of the lucky few. My extended families were quite large on my mother and father’s side and they all lived in one place which meant I could see them and enjoy them on any day. My paternal family settled in north Florida on the Georgia border in 1790 when it was a Spanish territory. My maternal line arrived in Florida in the early 1800’s from Nebraska. They made the trip in a covered wagon. In both cases the families were looking for the pioneer life and found it. It didn’t take long to multiply like rabbits and take over the place. My maternal grandpa was a well known naturalist in the area and was often sought out by visiting researchers and the Florida Department of Natural History. He and his multi-generational raccoons were a big hit. He lived to 103 and remembered every moment of every day of his life. You would have enjoyed him and his raccoons. They were well trained and liked people. The raccoons lived under his house since 1920 and sadly had to be relocated in 2019. I think they were sentient.

              Liked by 1 person

              1. It’s nice to hear people have positive stories about their families 😅

                Liked by 1 person

                1. Hyperion Avatar
                  Hyperion

                  LOL 😂 I have a gazillion funny family stories and some bizarre fates among the kinfolk.

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