A little over a week ago, my oldest had her wisdom teeth
out. The next day, she went on a scavenger hunt all over town and had a blast. (We
are tough women in this house when faced with pain and physical adversity.
Perhaps not so much existential adversity, but that’s another topic….)
The second day, she went shooting in the woods with her fellow “viper assassins,” as their beloved Tae Kwan Do teacher and
mentor likes to call this girl cohort of spectacular teen martial artists—two
black belts, four red-black belts approaching that milestone.
The teacher is a Marine, a grizzled martial arts and
self-defense expert who mixes his dedicated teaching with standup comedy (a
combination that goes over extremely well with the under-18 crowd), a voracious
reader, and a flaming political progressive. When he asked me if my daughter
could go, I felt it was in part a test of me and my biases, and I have to admit
that I quailed a bit, inside, at the thought of sending my child out into the
woods with guns.
However, I immediately and pseudo-confidently gave my public
permission, and decided I could think it over on my own time. Who knew, maybe
her father would veto it?
He did not.
However, in my conversations with several friends, a number
of them did. Veto it, I mean. I am firmly against gun ownership and use,
despite having grown up in the Midwest with shotguns in the house (I never had
the slightest interest in them, and steadfastly refused the occasional duck, pheasant,
or deer flesh that landed on our table). But aside from my initial hesitation
(largely due to the unexamined safety issues), I didn’t see that learning a
little bit about gun use necessarily went against my opposition to private gun ownership.
One friend, whom I respect deeply, was shocked
and expressed the fear “what if she really likes it?”
I have been thinking a lot about this decision, and its
implications, and how we make these incremental, sensitive, potentially consequential
decisions. Many emotional responses come into play in doing so, without our
even being fully conscious of them: fear is a big one—of the unknown, of tangible
dangers, of exposure to who-knows-what; unfamiliarity and its evil twin,
avoidance of displaying one’s ignorance–I suffer a lot from this, especially in
meeting international acquaintances, as I am mortified that my knowledge of so
many cultures is woefully superficial; self-consciousness—political, moral,
socio-economic (as I made clear, this one conditioned my immediate response in
this instance); the list is long.
However, in my life, I am trying increasingly to allow a
desire for new experiences that will stretch me and my loved ones to govern my
decision-making. As I look back on my
life, my adventurous choices are the ones I remember best, treasure most deeply,
and learned the most from. The moments (surprisingly,
more than a few, in my previous incarnations) where someone asked me to do
something because they knew I was a risk-taker, or would be open-minded, or was
someone who was up to an adventure, carry a special glow in how I conceive of
myself. The moments where I allowed myself to quail, or focused on the
inconvenience or difficulty a challenge might present, rather than the
possibilities it might offer, are those that I still occasionally struggle to
put into perspective.
As for the guns in the woods…. No one was injured. Everyone
had a great time. My daughter didn’t think she was up to the kick of the
shotgun after the oral surgery, and didn’t try it. She preferred the slim,
easily handled .22 and its low recoil.
Followed by the AK. The Glock was attractive but hard to stabilize.
A bold
addition to the metaphorical arsenal of her life
experiences, and by extension, mine.
Mary for the Poplar Grove Muse
Mary for the Poplar Grove Muse