Brad Waters
The last time I saw
Brad, Anne and I had just driven him home from the hospital. I
offered my hand as he got out of the car, but he ignored it. He
walked up the stairs to his house, clutching both railings to
maintain his balance. (He always did that, my kids told me.) And
then, for me, he was gone.
On one of the Over
the Hill Gang hikes in 2011 we were hiking above Pearl Ridge (I
think) when the trail suddenly ended. Instead of turning around, we
bushwhacked down a very steep incline, full of plants and rocks and
pukas. Brad gently lifted Zoe down some of the steepest boulders. The
walk up the other side of the valley was also steep, although there
was a path. Brad moved up the hill svery lowly and deliberately with
his dogs. He met us later at the top.
There was this
quality of loving persistence to Brad. When he looked at plants on
the trail, he looked carefully. He could name each plant: in Latin,
in English, in Hawaiian. He knew each plant’s history, its uses.
Often, he took a photo. When the photos had been downloaded, they
were often surprising. A fern at such close proximity you could see
lines of spores, some open and some closed, running down the vein
like natural Pacmen. His photographs often made the ordinary world
seem strange, so you could realize that it is.
There is a poem by
the Japanese zen poet, Ikkyo, from the 14th century, about
living and dying. It goes like this:
Empty-handed I
entered the world
Barefoot I leave it.
My coming, my
going--
Two simple
happenings
That got entangled.
I’m grateful that
my two simple happenings overlapped with Brad’s.
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