When I was a boy we lived within a mile of the Snake River, which curved to the south and west of our farm in a great bend that gave the area its name, Big Bend. We never went swimming in the river. Mama always warned us of its treacherous undertows and currents. Plus I always secretly knew it had snakes swimming in it, and snakes and I respectfully kept our distance, thank you.
We did swim, however, in a swimming hole a quarter or a half a mile south of the farm house. The swimming hole was at the junction of a couple of drain ditches and had a culvert, a small, moss-covered cement thing, we used to slide down into the water, a welcomed relief on a hot summer afternoon. (I visited the spot after I was a grown-up and was utterly amazed at how much smaller it was than when I was little.)
At other times we would drive to a place called White Rock, located somewhere on the Owyhee River, a much smaller and evidently less treacherous stream, since Mama let us swim there.
Sometime in the summer of 1955, just after I turned six, I nearly drowned at White Rock. (Mama mentioned in her diary our going to White Rock three times during the summer of 1955: July 23, July 25, and July 28. She did not mention my near-drowning, but she did record on July 28 that while up swimming she shut her little finger in the car door and "it sure hurt.")
Anyway, back to drowning. I was wading along the side of the river in shallow water, stepping among the rocks that covered the bottom in the spot where I was. Some of my older brothers, swimming farther out in the stream, had seen some fish and were trying to catch them with their hands.
The next thing I remember was standing or sitting on a rock that was slippery, with my body mostly under the water, when a fish splashed right in front of my face, just inches away. It startled me enough that I lost my balance, and I slipped out into the water, my head underwater, and I started drifting downstream. I didn’t know how to swim, and I don’t think anyone had noticed me go under. It seemed like I floated along underwater for the longest time, as my brief little life passed by, although I was probably under only a few seconds.
As I floated by my brother Kay, who was thirteen, he saw my foot in the water. As he grabbed for it I remember his yelling something like, "Hey, here's that fish!" And he pulled a coughing, sputtering little brother foot first out of the water.
The whole experience scared me terribly. For years I had a great fear of any water I couldn’t see the bottom of, such as a lake or a river. A few years later, when I was a teenager, this fear kept me from earning the Eagle rank in Scouting. By the time I quit Scouting, I was only two merit badges short of Eagle—swimming and lifesaving.
By the summer of 1967, just after I graduated from high school, I finally worked up the courage to try water skiing for the first time. And I actually survived.
My parents had nine children—eight boys and finally a girl. I was their seventh son. These are the stories from my life that I want to share with my children and their children and so on down until the end of time. I am grateful for the great goodness of my God and acknowledge His tender mercies in my life.
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
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