My roommate hanged himself on May 6, 1976, just a few hours after he told me “we had to switch to these” as he held up a can of Bud.
He went into his mother’s basement, tied a scarf around his neck, shot up enough heroin to pass out and died.
May, which just ended, is a difficult time for me because of this event. Often when I am attending a New Warrior Training Adventure weekend in April or May, I will tell that story of my roommate.
I ask the men in the circle to look at the men around them. I tell them, “these men have come for you.”
Then I say, “Nobody came for my roommate; nobody was there to support him.”
Telling the story tears at my heart. For years I became very depressed when May rolled around. I had a constant question of “why me? Why did I survive? Why did I get so lucky? How did I dodge so many bullets, figuratively and in reality?”
I can’t remember when, but it finally came to me that “there is no understanding grace.” There is no answer to my question.
But, from that question has come a hunger to live life to its absolute fullest. I have been unbelievably blessed and, when I am at my best, I am living in gratitude for just how fortunate I am.
The work we do, this transformational work we do to help each other find that we are enough — and find that we can be unbelievably magnificent just as we are — gives me one way to live my life to its fullest.
The past few years the chair of MKPI has been using the theme of initiating a million men. That just did not have any impact on me; it just went hhhhmmm, so what.
Then one day I was thinking that if a million men were to do this transformational work and got a glimpse of the wonderful gifts they have within, think of the ripples.
How many people would the ripples impact? How many children would have a father who is present? How many wives, partners and significant others would see their intimacy deepen and be more powerful?
How many missions of service would ripple out into the world? What would that do to the communities of those million men? Can you see what the possibility of that happening would look like?
Now that hits me. It hits my heart. It brings tears to my eyes.
I want to live to that day. I want to live in that world.
David Bauerly
Chair MKP-USA
This touched my heart and brings tears to my eyes. How many of us have not had other men in our lives when we needed them. I too have dodged many bullets in life, both actual threats and figuratively, yet I long for the day when more men can be authentic, honest and open to other men so that we may all survive and thrive in a better world.
Thanks.
Tony Umbdenstock
protecting bald eagle
Thank you, David! I trust a man who shows his emotions in such clean and candid ways.