Educated

(Axel Boer) #1

“How fast does energy travel?” I asked. “At the speed of sound, or is it
more like a jetliner? Does it fly direct, or will it have to lay over in
Minneapolis?”
Mother laughed and hung up.


I studied most mornings in the college library, near a small window. I was
there on a particular morning when Drew, a friend from BYU, sent me a song
via email. He said it was a classic but I had never heard of it, nor of the
singer. I played the song through my headphones. It gripped me immediately.
I listened to it over and over while staring out at the north cloister.


Emancipate yourselves from mental slavery
None but ourselves can free our mind

I scratched those lines into notebooks, into the margins of the essays I was
writing. I wondered about them when I should have been reading. From the
Internet I learned about the cancer that had been discovered on Bob Marley’s
foot. I also learned that Marley had been a Rastafarian, and that Rastafari
believe in a “whole body,” which is why he had refused surgery to amputate
the toe. Four years later, at age thirty-six, he died.
Emancipate yourselves from mental slavery. Marley had written that line a
year before his death, while an operable melanoma was, at that moment,
metastasizing to his lungs, liver, stomach and brain. I imagined a greedy
surgeon with sharp teeth and long, skeletal fingers urging Marley to have the
amputation. I shrank from this frightening image of the doctor and his corrupt
medicine, and only then did I understand, as I had not before, that although I
had renounced my father’s world, I had never quite found the courage to live
in this one.
I flipped through my notebook to the lecture on negative and positive
liberty. In a blank corner I scratched the line, None but ourselves can free our
mind. Then I picked up my phone and dialed.
“I need to get my vaccinations,” I told the nurse.


I attended a seminar on Wednesday afternoons, where I noticed two women,
Katrina and Sophie, who nearly always sat together. I never spoke to them
until one afternoon a few weeks before Christmas, when they asked if I’d like
to get a coffee. I’d never “gotten a coffee” before—I’d never even tasted
coffee, because it is forbidden by the church—but I followed them across the

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