manic shouting or sullen silence. I preferred something resembling a conversation, and so I ignored the tone.
“Well, a week from today, after writing innumerable papers, presenting myself at innumerable interviews, not to mention the acquisition of an expensive Master of Divinity degree, and serving for four years as a pastor of some form or another, the Bishop will lay her hands on me, pronounce the historic words, and I will be an Ordained Elder in the United Methodist Church.”
“You know,” Alan said, “I didn’t really understand a word of that. You made it clear that Methodism doesn’t exactly run in the family, except of course for the highly influential Uncle Sam the Bishop, so I am still puzzled where all of this came from. Wasn’t your mom a Zen Buddhist or something?”
“She practiced Zen for a while when I was a kid. I never did, but it’s astonishing how those early childhood experiences really shape how you view the world.”
“Still, that doesn’t really explain becoming a Methodist minister. I’ve known you for quite a while. You weren’t particularly interested in religion when we first met, be it Zen or anything else. In fact, you were as skeptical as I am. Did something happen that I don’t know about that has caused you to go all religious on me?”
“Yes, something did happen . . . or maybe, more accurately, some things happened. But it’s not perhaps what you’re thinking. I wasn’t ‘saved’ by some charismatic evangelical, and I wasn’t knocked off my donkey by Jesus like Paul was. Actually, it was a long process that began, I guess, before I was born. In order to understand, you kind of have to know the whole story.”
“You do realize that I am completely turned off by the church and conventional religion, right? But if I were to become anything, which I won’t, I’d be a Buddhist.”
“Don’t worry, I’m not going to try and convert you to Christianity, or to Buddhism for that matter! And I think the attraction to Buddhism may be more because it is exotic and appears deep, when in fact Christianity can be just as deep even if it doesn’t appear exotic. But I have been wondering myself what brought me to this pass, and how things that happened fifty or more years ago have recently become so important, including my mother’s dabbling in Zen Buddhism.”
“Well, my friend,” said Alan as he sipped the last of his Peet’s coffee, “I assume there’s still plenty of road and sunlight ahead of us. Explain to me how our beginnings precede us, or how we precede our beginnings, or something Zen like that.”
My mind’s eye turned backwards to those days so long ago, and the events and people who have since passed out of my life. Finally I said, mostly to myself, “God! I wonder what the neighbors were thinking!”
“What . . .?”
“Had our neighbors been paying attention, they might have noticed a non-descript automobile entering our driveway in the spring of 1966, when I was ten years old. After it entered the driveway it would have disappeared from their view into the plum and cedar trees growing wild to the left, and the chrysanthemum bushes lining the right side of the short driveway that gave our rural/suburban home a great deal of privacy. The neighbors would have had to walk to the head of driveway and peer down the asphalt lane to see where the automobile had parked. Hardly an unusual experience, but they might have been a bit more surprised when the driver emerged from the car. The diminutive oriental man had a shaved head and was wearing flowing maroon robes and traditional Japanese sandals. Such a sight might have startled our nosy neighbors, and even twenty years after the end of World War II the sight of a Japanese man in a California suburban neighborhood might have been alarming. They might have guessed from his attire that the man was a Buddhist monk, but what our neighbors would not have known is that a visit from Shunryu Suzuki to our home was somewhat unusual, but not surprising or alarming. Suzuki-roshi—roshi means teacher or master—was indeed a Zen Buddhist monk, and he had been invited for dinner in our home by my mother. His presence in California during the 1960s changed my mother’s life profoundly, and unknowingly laid the foundations of my own spiritual development.
“We lived northwest of San Jose, California, in the small community of Los Altos. In the mid-1950s Los Altos represented the ideal suburban community. Land and homes were inexpensive, lots were large, and my father, Norm Hiestand Jr., was able to purchase a home big enough for his growing family on a large lot near the golf course. He had married my mother, Barbara Johnston, in 1947, and in 1949 my oldest brother Norm was born, followed in 1951 by my sister Harriet, whom we called Hattie Lou in those days. A few years later Dad added an addition on to the home, a swimming pool, and two more kids: my other brother Charlie in 1955, and me in 1956. For the first nineteen years of my life, I never knew anything except the security and freedom of semi-rural suburban living. Surrounded by vacant lots, yet close to the Rancho Shopping center, which I remember fondly as having a world class bakery that created the best chocolate chip cookies a kid could possibly want. Life seemed to have a veneer of predictability, security and conventionality that was the hallmark of a white, middle class family in those times. It was not until I was older that I came to see the rips in that veneer, or that my definition of conventionality was not completely in sync with popular conceptions.
“All of these material privileges were made possible because my father had gotten in on the ground floor of the high-tech industry, which later came to be known as Silicon Valley. In the fifties, high tech pioneering companies like Hewlett Packard were gathered around Stanford University in Palo Alto. My father had received an Electrical Engineering degree from Stanford, and became employee number nine for a new start-up called Varian Associates. When Dad started with them, they were making klystron tubes, an obscure but necessary component of microwave communications equipment. Because this equipment was used by the government, Dad had to travel a lot, including internationally, which later became a problematic lifestyle for him. But in the beginning, it was exciting to be in a cutting edge industry, and Dad used his success to purchase the American dream for his family.
“Dad had started this American dream by wooing and marrying a beautiful and intelligent grad student named Barbara Johnston. My mom had acquired a Master’s Degree in Art from Claremont University in Pasadena and married Dad, who had done his undergraduate work in southern California, in 1947. However, my mom bought into, or fell into, the Ozzie and Harriet lifestyle expectations of the 1950s, which dictated that her primary role in society, her primary identity, was that of wife and mother, holding a supporting role for her professional husband. Her artwork could be no more than a hobby, which I think really grated on her rather Bohemian soul. She also inherited a complicated family history. She adored her father, but her mother was controlling and unhappy. After her father died she was obliged to care for her mother, all of which really wasn’t in the Ozzie and Harriet script. My grandmother was moved into a little apartment in Sunnyvale, where my parents had lived before moving to Los Altos, but Mom rarely let us kids see her, and when she passed away in 1961 we weren’t even allowed to attend the funeral.
“After her father’s death in 1954, Mom announced to Dad that she wanted to have more children (to which he prophetically replied, ‘Can I finish my drink first?’), and a year later my brother Charlie was born, followed by me the next year. The first hint I had as a child that the perfect suburban veneer might have rips in it came when I was about four or five years old. With four children, my mother was confronted with multiple loads of laundry every day, and I remember walking into our laundry room one day to find Mom sobbing her eyes out as she stuffed another load of laundry into the washing machine. She uncharacteristically yelled at me to ‘get out,’ and I ran to my room, sobbing my own eyes out. I was certain I had done something wrong to make Mom behave as she had, but I had no idea what. Mom never mentioned this incident, so I didn’t either, but oddly I remember it vividly over fifty years later. I guess it qualifies as the first entry on my guilt list, but that little incident exemplifies a vein of deep unhappiness that was starting to surface in the early 1960s.
“Dad chose a different route to escape from the growing unhappiness he felt with his job and family. Social drinking was a way of life in the fifties and sixties, so it only dawned on the rest of us gradually that Dad