MORE WEIGHT

Guest Post by Hardscrabble Farmer

On the night before Halloween, Mischief Night, I took our children to the Meeting House for a lecture on the Salem Witch Trials. A professor had come up from Massachusetts to give a presentation and since it was something none of us knew much about and because it was that season, we thought it would be interesting to attend. The interior of the Meeting House was an almost perfect match for the subject matter, stark and simple with it’s lectern rising several feet above the assembly at the rear of the building. The pews, when we arrived, were about half filled and there was no heat so everyone was still in their coats and hats.

We took a seat about a third of the way back and after a brief introduction a young woman stood up in the front of the room and began her slideshow. She gave an overview of the events and a little bit of the backstory, but she made a point to tell the audience that the theme of her talk would be centered not so much on the story as it would be on the presumed history- what we think we know, versus what was fact. As it turned out there was a great deal of fiction tied into the story, from the location- it was not the town Salem, but instead Danvers where the bewitchings took place- to the means of execution; hangings in all but one case rather than being burned at the stake as is commonly believed by many.

There were the smaller details, she told us, that had become central to the narrative which had over the years proved quite hollow; the location of Gallows Hill, Tituba, a pivotal character commonly believed to be an African slave who was more than likely an Indian and one of the only accused witches to escape punishment and the final words of the only person who refused to confess, an 80 year old, well regarded and successful farmer named Giles Corey. Refusing to admit that he was a witch he underwent a barbaric method of execution called peine forte et dure.

Stripped bare the aged man was laid upon the bare ground and a board placed upon his prostrate form. The executioners placed weights, likely stones taken from the nearby walls and stacked them, one by one over a period that is said to have lasted two days while his neighbors stood by and watched as he was slowly crushed to death. Repeatedly demanding that he confess, Corey remained silent until, commanded by the judge, time to implicate himself he uttered his last words, “More weight.”

The talk concluded with refreshments at the Veterans Hall across the street. The speaker was taking questions and my youngest son had one- “Why weren’t any children accused of being witches? If funny faces and jerky movements were evidence…” he asked. She told him that no one had ever asked her that before and that she was surprised to see someone so young at her talk, but she never gave him an answer.

I thought it was pretty insightful and I told him so. My children sampled the baked goods and drank apple cider and I stood with a cup of black coffee at the edge of the room watching them interact with the elderly crowd. I chatted with several people I knew and across the room I noticed another veteran, a man I had been friends with, briefly. Earlier this Summer he had come up to the farm with a grave look upon his face and a neatly folded piece of paper in his hands. “What’s the trouble?” I asked him and he simply passed the paper to me.

It was a photo copy of a newspaper article from 13 years ago identifying me as a racist and calling for my resignation from the Town Council in my hometown. I felt my heartbeat quicken and a slow anger rise, but it wasn’t the first time and I knew that it wasn’t likely to be the last and I kept my calm while I held it in my dirty, calloused hands. I asked him where he got it and he replied that someone had given it to him and he asked if it was true. I told him I’d answer any questions he wanted to ask, but he had to tell me who had given it to him. “I can’t do that.” he said. I looked at his face and for long time and I could see him diminish in front of me, growing weaker and less assured as each moment passed.

After a pause I asked him what he wanted to know and he asked me again, Is it true?” I asked him if he had ever known me to be anything like what he had read in that article, if it sounded like the person he had become acquainted with over the course of the past few years and he looked down at his shoes. I told him that I didn’t like to engage in gossip and that I didn’t think much of people who spread rumors while hiding their identity from their targets and that if he had any other questions about my character he should ask my wife or my children, people who really knew me and then I excused myself and told him I had work to do.

I remember walking across the lawn with the dogs, leaving him standing in my driveway by his Subaru and except to exchange a hello when we crossed paths, I have never spoken with him since that day. I no longer attend the Veterans meetings either and it is probably for the best. Like Groucho Marx once said, “I wouldn’t want to belong to any club that would accept me as a member.” After awhile the older veteran approached me and asked how things were on the farm and I told him we were busy and inquired about his health. He mentioned that he had taken on too many responsibilities since his retirement and that he was cutting back.

He asked me if I would be coming to the Veteran’s Day ceremony and I told him I had other plans. He said he understood and offered his hand, which I shook and then he turned away. Maybe I imagined it, but it seemed as if he made the connection between the whispered accusations in 1692 and the day he stood on my lawn with his photocopied smear, but it struck me that nothing in human behavior changes all that much but the names and the dates and of course the weight. I gathered up the children and we made our way back to the truck and as we pulled out of the lot they rolled down the window and called out thank-you to the speaker as she walked across the street to her own car in the autumnal darkness.

Yesterday after school I waited at the end of the driveway for the kids to get off the bus. The dogs always come with me and the other kids on the bus always smile and wave at them and even the bus driver, an ancient Yankee woman with blue hair, manages a rickety grin. The children had been asking me for weeks to rake up a pile of leaves to play in and that morning after they had gone to school I found a desultory little clump half finished under the maples on the front lawn, rakes akimbo, evidence that they had given up on me.

Sometimes I get distracted, anyone would with the world, the worries of life, responsibilities and the passage of time. In this case I let down the ones I love in the little things even if I managed to keep up with the bigger ones. I remember vividly the times my father would rake leaves on the lawn and I would ruin his neatly placed piles by jumping into them, flakes of decomposing matter in my hair and down my shirt, and the sound of crinkling fall in my ears. As we walked up the driveway I asked them if they’d come out to the pasture with me while I finished up my work.

I told them I’d do something special for them if they did and they agreed. They ditched their lunch boxes and book bags in the mudroom and met me on the terrace in front of the house. From up there the ground drops off precipitously in undulating waves of grassy hillside, softened by ten thousand years of erosion since the glaciers made their last retreat. I was set up half a mile down the slope installing fence line at the base of the esker. The largest trees on the property are rooted on it’s flanks, massive oaks and monumental rock maples with trunks the size of the columns at the Acropolis.

They had dumped their leaves in a rusty spray at the foot of the hillside and while the kids were at school I had raked them into a pile bigger than I had ever raked before. They caught sight of it as we were walking down the path and they broke into a run screaming with joy the entire way. There are few things in life as moving as the unbridled love of your children and it came off of them in waves as they threw themselves into the pile and disappeared from view. I went back to my work, stopping to watch them play in the leaves as often as I worked, the dogs racing in circles around the pile while the children laughed and jumped.

We stayed out there until it was dark and I carried the tools in a bucket as we walked back up the hill, my children thanking me again and again, recounting the size of the pile the whole way home, bigger with each retelling. “It was sooo huge!” “It was this big!” Arms extended above their heads; smiles, bright eyes, happiness. It’s funny with kids, you think they’ll never grow up, but then they do and you wonder where all the time went. You never remember the work involved, only the joy and like the kids it only magnifies with each retelling.

The house was lit up and my wife had filled the kitchen with smells that fed you before you had a chance to eat. Our oldest son dropped by with gifts for his brother and sister, things he’d been given for doing a clean out for a customer of his who was past the child-rearing stage of life and needed to lighten their load. They thanked him profusely and he basked for a moment in the light of their gratitude and took a baking dish of Shepherd’s pie his mother offered before he left. As he drove off the kids ran along the rock wall waving and calling out goodbyes and I joined in, acting like I was one of them.

Later, after the kids had gone to bed my wife and I sat quietly together with just a few lights on and sighed from the efforts of the day. She works every bit as hard as I do and I can’t imagine how she does it without being worn down from the gravity of it all, but somehow she always comes up shining and graceful. We talked about the leaves and how much fun the kids had playing in them and it made it all worth it, how it lightens our load to see them grow up the way they are and that even in our exhaustion at the end of the day there’d never be a better way to live our life.

I know that when you look back over your life you think about the things you should have done better or the things you should never have done at all, but all those things add up to not so much when you take the time to do what you should as well as you can and it becomes easier to imagine saying, ‘more weight’.

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190 Comments
Billy
Billy
November 10, 2015 9:32 am

PS. The only guy I personally know with the training and experience to tackle this has a PhD. in Engineering, but he spent 30 years in nuclear energy, not petroleum.

And even IF he agreed to bend his considerable intelligence to tackling the problem, knowing how to do something doesn’t mean you can do it – you still need access to the resources to make what you need. Which means a facility to produce what’s needed and the qualified men to run the facility…

Meh… I need more coffee…

yahsure
yahsure
November 10, 2015 3:37 pm

I did pest control for a little while.Going through many houses i realized that most didn’t have one book inside. Maybe a TV guide. I realized then that as a society,We were screwed.
Last night i saw a discussion about the gun violence in Chicago,Of course gun’s were blamed. Funny how there was no talk about anyone taking responsibility for their actions.
I try to always take a few minutes with my kids,They make life better,That spark in their eyes is something you rarely see in adults. A nice thought is to remember seeing a kid catch their first fish,They never forget it.

Maggie
Maggie
November 10, 2015 9:21 pm

Just back from a lovely visit with my son, then with the Yoder women. Husband and sons are building another log home, so was a wonderful opportunity to learn to make bread the Mennonite way.

Not rabid at all… just willing to bark and bite for no reason. A most dangerous sort of beastie.

HSF, I may need to ask advice about purchasing a milk cow from the Yoders. Would my questions be misplaced here?

flash
flash
November 11, 2015 5:58 am

no worries, the latte servers will save US.[imgcomment image?oh=27550775c6ed42c7e35f85fa9c9a8db6&oe=56B2DAEF[/img]

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
November 11, 2015 6:03 am

Maggie- ask away.

Llpoh
Llpoh
November 11, 2015 6:17 am

HSF says somewhere above that on TBP we all get along.

Not hardly. These days maybe it seems so. But scratch the surface too hard, and all hell will break loose. Admin, Stuck, SSS, Billy (still a newbie), etc., can really get nasty. Me too, come to think of it.

We have had some serious bloodbaths that have gotten downright nasty. Ever so often, we still can rise to the occasion. Hell, not long ago IS and I destroyed that Fifth Estate guy from Indonesia. And we were being nice.

We are just waiting for a good moment, and the monkeys will rise again.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
November 11, 2015 7:16 am

Llpoh I’m really looking forward to hearing about your homestead experience- I’ve never been to Australia but I’ve always wondered what it would be like to make a go of it in a place that isolated from the world. I hope it works out the way you want it to.

M.I.A.
M.I.A.
November 11, 2015 8:13 am

Llpoh – It looks like Stucky got tangled up with ROCKETMAN on the Deep State / Shadow Government thread last night and and ended up resigning his Big Dog status here at TBP.

Famous last words were …. #$$%@#*&^$@# and furthermore …..

Fuck you all. I’m sick and fucking tired of this bullshit. I’ve finally had enough !!!

Stucky
Stucky
November 11, 2015 8:29 am

M.I.A.

No one takes those rants seriously. Not even me.

And, just for you … for saying I “resigned” my Big Dog Status, here is a gratuitous FUCK YOU and the horse you rode in on!!

Your welcome.

flash
flash
November 11, 2015 10:13 am

White libtards will only understand what they’ve lost once it’s gone.

http://www.voxday.blogspot.com/

Can’t say we weren’t warned
The Chateau digs up an early warning about the inevitable effects of immigration on America:

We find that our democratic theories and forms of government were fashioned by but one of the many races and peoples which have come within their practical operation, and that that race, the so-called Anglo-Saxon, developed them out of its own insular experience unhampered by inroads of alien stock. When once thus established in England and further developed in America we find that other races and peoples, accustomed to despotism and even savagery, and wholly unused to self-government, have been thrust into the delicate fabric. Like a practical people as we pride ourselves, we have begun actually to despotize our institutions in order to control these dissident elements, though still optimistically holding that we retain the original democracy.

flash
flash
November 11, 2015 10:17 am

Stuck you do understand that EC has become a naturalized Big Dog, due to heroic acts of courage and determination displayed under heavy fire duirng the various and lengthy TBP flame wars. I do hope you are prepared to play nice with EC….nevertheless , glad to see you back Big Dog….now go find EC and bury the bone.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
November 11, 2015 1:10 pm

flash, two points:
I’m a troll, not a big dog. I comment but don’t carry a conversation.
I should thank you for the sentiment but for your unfortunate choice of words, it’s bury ‘the hatchet.’

Maggie
Maggie
November 11, 2015 3:34 pm

@HSF, I got a message from Mrs. Yoder that the cow sold while I was driving home. I knew I should have bought it and put it into the SUV.

Llpoh
Llpoh
November 11, 2015 3:47 pm

HSF – so far my most exciting moment is a close up encounter with a six foot example of the world’s second most poisonous snake – the eastern brown.

I almost packed up and left right then, after I changed my tidy whiteys of course. Oz snakes are not to be trifled with, esp. the taipan, the eastern brown, the tiger, the death adder, the king brown, etc etc etc. a taipan got a guy last week. You barely have time to kiss your ass goodbye if one of them gets you.

The vast majority of snakes here are potentially deadly. I hate snakes.

I will post an update when I can. At the moment I am terrorizing one and all on my new tractor – have not quite figured out how to control that bad boy just yet.

Billah's wife
Billah's wife
November 11, 2015 9:48 pm

Oh mah gawd Hardscramble, you don’t want it ter end like this. Yer got Maggie asking about cows she ain’t gonner buy on the way back from visitin her homer sexual son, an dyer got llpoh fantasizing about Australian snakes from his mother’s garage apartment. Better axe admenstruater ter pull the plug on this one, er maybe say ‘more weight’.

Good gawd yer awesome.

Billy's Wife's Multicultural Transgender Lover
Billy's Wife's Multicultural Transgender Lover
November 11, 2015 11:30 pm

Missus Billy you damn ho I dun did tells you to quits making truba on dis here bored girl! You soo dumb youz can bearly tipes or spellz aneewayz. Now git yer fat asz backs ova hear an get mee a dam drink befores I haves to smack yer asz. Werd!

M.I.A.
M.I.A.
November 12, 2015 12:22 am

Re: Stucky 8:14 am So you want to fuck the horse that I rode in on. My horse is not probably not going to like that.

Here is a picture of my horse

[imgcomment image[/img]

Let me know how that works out

Maggie
Maggie
November 12, 2015 12:23 am

The question, HSF, will be valid in any case, for future reference.

I grew up with Jersey milk and know it is rich in cream, but don’t necessarily want so much cream now. The cow the Yoders had was a Holstein and she was about 10 years old and had a calf two years ago. She is milked daily. My question is/was how long I can expect to be able to get at least one gallon from a Holstein before having to breed her again. I know what the “books” say, but I also know that our Jersey gave a gallon daily for a long time after she was “supposed” to when I was a kid.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
November 12, 2015 12:27 am

This definitely proves the girls don’t get prettier at closing time.

Just a note to say:
1. I picture Billy the way his neighbors see him right there in the workshop.
2. Thanks, everybody for keeping me company during my working vacation putting in a counter top and sink. There was a time or two when I thought for a second about taking a sudden trip across the country. Another time I thought it would be a good time to lay on the couch and weep. You guys kept me laughing when I was bone tired, the body locks in one position and won’t move, thank you for all your entertaining comments.
3. I have to go to work tomorrow so I can get some rest.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
November 12, 2015 12:31 am

Maggie says: I grew up with Jersey milk and know it is rich in cream, but don’t necessarily want so much cream now.

Mags, I grew up on mama’s milk. We used to watch the girls walking by and one of the guys would spot a particularly well-endowed girl, he’d say, that’s the one I need to finish growing up.

jamesthewanderer
jamesthewanderer
November 12, 2015 1:32 am

Billy,
You can make ethanol much easier than about anything else – just ask the moonshiners. You actually have a better chance of making biodiesel, although you need a salt like to electrolyse the saline solution to get decent quality lye to split the fats. Neutralizing it afterwards isn’t all that tough either, especially if you have some vinegar around. There are directions on the Internet to make biodiesel, even the Feds will tell you how:

http://www.fueleconomy.gov/feg/biodiesel.shtm

You need to be responsible enough to find a disposal method for that spent caustic, though. Still, in general, biodiesel has BETTER lubricity than petroleum diesel (your engines should run smoother and last longer). And you still have to make it, probably by yourself, so practice NOW for when you really need it. Once you can make it to decent quality, I doubt you’ll want to buy regular! And since you have corn available, press some (corn oil) for biodiesel manufacture and ferment the leftovers (ethanol) for other uses.

Can I solve any more problems for you today? Have fun!

jamesthewanderer
jamesthewanderer
November 12, 2015 1:50 am

Better resource for methanol / ethanol-based biodiesel:

http://journeytoforever.org/ethanol_link.html#ethylester

They give recipes, directions, temperatures, equipment, all you should need to get started. They suggest starting with the methanol esters, and you probably should to get comfortable with the methods, but just reading them tells me they know what they’re doing. And biodiesel is a LOT safer than trying DIY-crude-oil chemistry!

Maggie
Maggie
November 12, 2015 5:05 am

And while I’m seeking your advice, I will ask you about my actual purchase this weekend… meat rabbits. Do you raise/sell them?

I bought two does and a buck and he is not yet “mature” but should be within a month or so. I have them in an old dog kennel while we build their home (like the cow purchase, it was something that I bumped into… a good deal I didn’t want to miss so the rabbits are here early. That is a mild inconvenience to Nick the builder, but a whole cow would have required fencing and a pasture shelter, so it is probably best that Mrs. Yoder sold her.)

If you know about rabbits, is it okay for me to leave the buck in with the does until he comes of age or is he likely to surprise us by being in with the females. I hate to put him in a box alone for no reason.

Maggie
Maggie
November 12, 2015 5:15 am

By the way, here are my rabbits… there were four (my friend threw one in for eating) but my little cousin needed a friend for his guinea pig Tom Sawyer. The rabbit is now Injun Joe… all due respect to LLPOH.[imgcomment image[/img]

And here is my little cousin Huck watching Television with Tom and Injun Joe aka I-Jay beside him. I-Jay would have made a lovely pot of German Hasenpfeffer, but he’s pretty cute sitting there with little Huck.

[imgcomment image[/img]

flash
flash
November 12, 2015 8:19 am

EC , In the mold of the biggest dog of all, Smokey, Big Dogs are determined by battle scars and you got plenty. Keep stirring the shit , that’s the lifeblood of TBP …elsewise Stuck and his gang of femi-nazis would turn it into an circle jerking echo chamber..God forbid.

flash
flash
November 12, 2015 8:23 am

[imgcomment image[/img]

flash
flash
November 12, 2015 8:23 am

suckit LR

[imgcomment image:large[/img]

Code Name: Horse Fucker
Code Name: Horse Fucker
November 12, 2015 8:26 am

I’m not a femi-nazi. Why don’t you go away again,flash?

Maggie
Maggie
November 12, 2015 8:41 am
Francis Marion
Francis Marion
November 12, 2015 10:46 am

Modern Educayshun is creeping up on 1 million views. Think maybe folks are getting a little tired of this shit? Me thinks that cultural Marxism is about to experience some serious backlash. One can only hope.

fear & loathing
fear & loathing
November 12, 2015 6:45 pm

HSF, i suppose if the death of my dearest love had not occurred i likely would have read each post and been all the wiser for it. speaking for myself, you have my utmost admiration, i chose the same life yet after seven years it just ended in a flick of the eye. never the less, more weight has become internal for me, again i visited my pastor, who also had many many difficult times, our shared experience allows us to see the world in a slightly different way. not that we wish others to encounter the places we visited and apparently survived. yet i suggested she look into your writings as you provoke so many positive thoughts, by both deed and action. i am among many who are in your debt for living the very life you espouse. thanks to jim and this wonderful site my life is more balanced,

Montefrío
Montefrío
November 12, 2015 7:43 pm

@Billy: How ’bout water well drilling? Maybe that’s old hat in the USA,but down here in South America… If, ojala, the Argentines elect Macri and move to the right, the biz my son and I have wanted to start for years now may become a reality. He’s an engineer in offshore oil drilling but has two tiny tots and wants to work from home. It’s time if conditions permit. Water may well become the new oil, so…

@ElC: What “concession” of mine? You’ve lost me there?

@HSF: You recently commented that the high-school-grad folks you know were solid, and I’m sure that’s true of the ones you know, but “The numbers prove the harsh reality that New Hampshire tops the nation for addiction, especially for harder drugs like heroin. Worse than that, the numbers show the problem is only getting worse.” (http://pjmedia.com/blog/gop-derides-new-hampshire-governor-calling-legislature-into-special-session-to-deal-with-heroin/). I still maintain that white folks without education, formal or otherwise, whose expectations keep dropping, are at risk for all the substance abuse problems, at risk big-time, and not just those up in the Northeast Kingdom. You and yours know how to appreciate the small things (I have my little farmlette and like to think I do too), but far too many DON’T appreciate or understand those things and their failure to do so or to be “educated” to do so buys them a first-class ticket on the express train to despair. How many Mr. Coreys are left today?

Montefrío
Montefrío
November 12, 2015 7:51 pm

@Mags: Everyone will scream, but down here, well, a better bet than rabbit is the cuy, better known up there as the guinea pig. Granted, they’re bony and a pain in the buttski to trim, but they’re far less susceptible to disease,grass fed, higher yielding than bunnies and when the killjoys ask in horror “How can you kill that adorable l’il critter?”, well, you reply: “It’s easy, really. You just put the head in your mouth and give the body a yank.”

http://cookeatshare.com/recipes/roasted-cuy-guinea-pig-407499

Montefrío
Montefrío
November 12, 2015 7:56 pm

Then there’s this Mr. Cory (sic), perhaps more typical of today:

Whenever Richard Cory went down town,
We people on the pavement looked at him:
He was a gentleman from sole to crown,
Clean favored, and imperially slim.

And he was always quietly arrayed,
And he was always human when he talked;
But still he fluttered pulses when he said,
‘Good-morning,’ and he glittered when he walked.

And he was rich – yes, richer than a king –
And admirably schooled in every grace:
In fine, we thought that he was everything
To make us wish that we were in his place.

So on we worked, and waited for the light,
And went without the meat, and cursed the bread;
And Richard Cory, one calm summer night,
Went home and put a bullet through his head.
Edwin Arlington Robinson

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
November 12, 2015 8:35 pm

Fear and loathing I am very sorry for your loss, truly. If you are ever in our corner of the world, you are most welcome to visit.

I don’t know that I have ever told this story here, but not long after Jim was kind enough to take one of my comments and turn it into a post, I made a trip back home to visit family and met with up him over beers one afternoon. I wanted him to know my story so that my reputation wouldn’t bring him or this blog into disrepute because of my association. I don’t think he gave it so much as a moment’s consideration and kept the welcome mat out for me despite my rep and I will never forget that kindness and show of true character. Admin is the real deal.

The Burning Platform is much more than an economic blog, it is a sanctuary for honest discussion and a place where every voice is given a hearing no matter how far off the mainstream they may be. I’ve been on the interwebs since Prodigy was the big thing and this is one of the most unusual and worthwhile places I’ve ever found.

Thanks to everyone who commented on this thread.

BEA LEVER
BEA LEVER
November 12, 2015 9:06 pm

Fear & Loathing- So sorry for your loss, sincerely.

hardscrabble farmer- I’m sure things will work out , thank you for another great article and interesting thread.

Maggie
Maggie
November 13, 2015 7:17 am

@HSF; I’ve sensed that Admin is the “Real McCoy” from the first day I read any of his writing. People can be pretty deceptive when they talk, but when someone writes something down and tells a story about themselves taking their kid to college (happened to be the first article of his I read), you can see all the way to their soul, if they have one. Or all the way to the bottom of their soulless feet, if they do not.

@Montefrio…My little cousin (Huck) who now owns the small bunny (Injun Joe) also has the Guinea (Tom Sawyer). I won’t be eating cuy.

My dear friend already asked me how in the world I could kill a creature that is so beautiful. I told her with a solid whack to the back of the head that makes blood fly out the ears to ensure there is no suffering and pain (or damage to the fur, which is also valuable.)

Maggie
Maggie
November 13, 2015 7:18 am

[imgcomment image[/img]