Mother American Night
Page 1
PRAISE FOR
John Perry Barlow and Mother American Night
“Imagine you are hitchhiking and an ancient Mustang pulls up and the most interesting guy in the world beckons you to hop in. He’s driving 100 miles per hour all night long, and for the next three days he’s telling you tales, each one bigger and badder and more profound than the one before it. This is a hilarious, rhetorical, and soul-prodding book. I never feel so alive as when Barlow is telling me a story, and here are a life’s worth.”
—Kevin Kelly
“John Perry Barlow unmoored us from the clay of Earth and delivered us into a place of digital freedom. He leaves us with this kaleidoscopic necklace of colorful vignettes painted in his unique and poignant way.”
—Vint Cerf, Internet pioneer
“Reading John Perry Barlow’s book is like a spirited visit with him. He was a rebel, having almost mystical and cosmic gifts of communication, wisdom, and awareness. Mankind was his cause. His book confirms the solace he found when he learned to love and be loved.”
—Alan K. Simpson, U.S. senator, Wyoming (retired)
“It was easy to befriend John Perry Barlow…he was a visionary of the worldwide Web and prophet of cyberspace, the idea of the Internet as a libertarian realm beyond the reach of governments. He was also, at various times, a cattle rancher in Wyoming and a lyricist for the rock band Grateful Dead….Barlow had the air of a global vagabond.”
—Financial Times
“Barlow is the uncrowned poet laureate of cyberspace.”
—Mitchell Kapor, cofounder of the Electronic Freedom Frontier
“I loved this book. I am a slow reader, but I read it twice in three and a half days. I have since gone back and begun reading chapters in no particular order, which seems fine to me as well. I first met John about forty years ago, and we have been fast friends ever since.”
—Ramblin’ Jack Elliott
Copyright © 2018 by Amelia Rose Barlow, Anna Winter Barlow, and Leah Justine Barlow
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Crown Archetype, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.
crownarchetype.com
Crown Archetype and colophon is a registered trademark of Penguin Random House LLC.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Barlow, John P. (John Perry) author. | Greenfield, Robert.
Title: Mother American Night : my life in crazy times / John Perry Barlow with Robert Greenfield.
Description: First edition. | New York : Crown Archetype, [2018]
Identifiers: LCCN 2017050430 (print) | LCCN 2017052223 (ebook) | ISBN 9781524760205 (e-book) | ISBN 9781524760182 (hardcover) | ISBN 9781524760199 (trade pbk.)
Subjects: LCSH: Barlow, John P. (John Perry) | Lyricists—United States—Biography. | Grateful Dead (Musical group)
Classification: LCC ML423.B256 (ebook) | LCC ML423.B256 A3 2018 (print) | DDC 782.42164092 [B]—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017050430
ISBN 9781524760182
Ebook ISBN 9781524760205
Frontispiece photo by Elaine Barlow
Cover design by Jessie Sayward Bright
Cover photograph: Ted Wood
v5.2
ep
For Willah Brave Barlow Dunwody, a vote of the future
CONTENTS
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Epigraph
Prologue: Not Dead Enough
Chapter One: The Little Red Bull
Chapter Two: Norman and Mim
Chapter Three: Home on the Ranch
Chapter Four: Fountain Valley
Chapter Five: Getting into College
Chapter Six: Wesleyan
Chapter Seven: Good Old Grateful Dead
Chapter Eight: Summer of Love
Chapter Nine: Harvard Yard
Chapter Ten: Fair-Haired Boy
Chapter Eleven: An Incredible Week
Chapter Twelve: The Journey East
Chapter Thirteen: Coming Home
Chapter Fourteen: New York, New York
Chapter Fifteen: Mexicali Blues
Chapter Sixteen: Sugar Magnolia
Chapter Seventeen: Looks Like Rain
Chapter Eighteen: Cassidy
Chapter Nineteen: John F. Kennedy, Jr.
Chapter Twenty: Heaven Help the Fool
Chapter Twenty-one: Adult Behavior
Chapter Twenty-two: Éminence Grise
Chapter Twenty-three: Global Sociopath
Chapter Twenty-four: Feel Like a Stranger
Chapter Twenty-five: Word Processing
Photo Insert
Chapter Twenty-six: Welcome to Apple
Chapter Twenty-seven: A Little Light
Chapter Twenty-eight: The Ivory Gavel
Chapter Twenty-nine: A Call from the White House
Chapter Thirty: Phiber Optik and Acid Phreak
Chapter Thirty-one: A Visit from the FBI
Chapter Thirty-two: EFF
Chapter Thirty-three: Timothy Leary Redux
Chapter Thirty-four: Who’s NeXT
Chapter Thirty-five: Meeting Cynthia
Chapter Thirty-six: Living with Her
Chapter Thirty-seven: Losing Her
Chapter Thirty-eight: Rehab
Chapter Thirty-nine: A Gold Rush of the Heart
Chapter Forty: He’s Gone
Chapter Forty-one: Timothy Leary’s Dead
Chapter Forty-two: Kennedy-Nixon
Chapter Forty-three: Two Funerals
Chapter Forty-four: Brazil
Chapter Forty-five: The Pure Water Project
Chapter Forty-six: The Freedom of the Press Foundation
Chapter Forty-seven: Hell in a Bucket
Epilogue: Love Forgives Everything
Acknowledgments
About the Author
The black-throated wind keeps on pouring in
With its words of a life where nothing is new.
Ah, Mother American Night, I’m lost from the light.
Ohhh, I’m drowning in you.
—John Perry Barlow, “Black-Throated Wind”
Flight of the seabirds
Scattered like lost words.
Wheel to the storm and fly.
—John Perry Barlow, “Cassidy”
We fray into the future, rarely wrought
Save in the tapestries of afterthought.
—Richard Wilbur, “Year’s End”
PROLOGUE
NOT DEAD ENOUGH
I am determined to learn how to accept love, which I think may be the secret of life. If you can accept love, you can do damn near everything else. Giving love is easy and so most people go about thinking that they’re fully capable in the love department because they can give it. But as I have learned, that is not the case, and how could it be? If you don’t accept it, where are you going to get love to give?
My mentor in this regard is the only person I’ve ever met in my life who can seamlessly accept
love: Gilberto Gil, the great musician and former minister of culture in Brazil. For him, it appears to be effortless. Since I would say that he is the most beloved person in the most loving country on the planet, it’s very lucky for him and them that he can accept it so easily.
On April 16, 2015, Gil was performing at Davies Symphony Hall in San Francisco. On my way back from Huntsville, Texas, where I had been lured to give a speech, I spent hours tramping around the Atlanta airport in a brand-new pair of cowboy boots while waiting for a flight that would get me back home in time for Gil’s show.
For years, I had been getting my boots from the Olathe boot company in Kansas. They were made of Norwegian elk leather, which is especially pliant and so could accommodate a bunion I have on my left foot that somebody once said should be in the Boone and Crockett big game trophy book of bunions if there had ever been one.
I already had about ten pairs of these boots that had been kept in walking condition by a wizard in San Francisco who said he could restore any cowboy boot that had ever been made, and, by golly, he could. But I had not been to see him for a while and in an act of desperation, I bought a pair of Norwegian elk boots from another company. Although they were not pliant, I said to myself, “How bad could they be during a short trip?”
Although I arrived in San Francisco too late to see him perform, Gil and I did then go back to the Mark Hopkins hotel, where the two of us sat up all night long talking in the lobby by ourselves. It was a rich moment, and an ironic one as well, because at the time, I had no idea whatsoever that I was about to embark on the greatest experience I could ever imagine in terms of teaching me how to accept love.
Having worn a gigantic hole in the index toe of my left foot by walking for hours through the Atlanta airport in those brand-new boots, I woke up the next morning, which also happened to be the twenty-first anniversary of the worst day of my life, with my right shoulder on fire. From past experience, I knew right away that I had contracted a staph infection in my blood and it had taken refuge in a major joint.
I went to Stanford Medical Center, where they said, “You’re not running a fever, and since your white blood cell count is not elevated, we don’t think you’ve got a staph infection. Take these pain killers and sleep aids and go home and see if it doesn’t improve over a couple of days.”
I went home. I took the pain killers. I went to sleep and when I woke up, all four of my major joints were on fire, both shoulders and both knees. I called my friend Dr. Beth Kaplan, who was then an emergency room physician at San Francisco General Hospital. She came down and checked me out and said, “You’re dying. We’ve got to get you the fuck out of here.” Which I then confirmed by puking up about a quart of blood.
They came and took me back to the Stanford Medical Center by ambulance. At Beth’s insistence, they did this hideous thing called lavage where they opened up my joints and used a stream of antiseptics and antibiotics to clean out the infection. In the process, they also cleaned out all that was left of the cartilage in those joints.
They also installed a PICC line, which caused me to contract a second bacterial infection that set up camp in some hardware in my back. Suddenly, I couldn’t walk. I was also not producing any red blood cells, and so they transferred me up to UCSF in San Francisco, where they stabilized my bone marrow.
While I was at UCSF, the doctor who had installed that hardware cleaned out the bacteria that had attacked it. I had no way of conveying to him that I was on an heroic amount of blood thinners to prevent a pulmonary embolism, and in the process, he created a hematoma that put a large blood clot about the size and shape of two golf balls between my spinal cord and the epidural sheath. They had to open me right back up at four o’clock in the morning to get it out of there. I had gone under the knife with him several times before, so I just had to be positive and trust him.
Before he did this, he said, “John Perry, I gotta tell you. I don’t know what I’m going to find when I get in there, but I think unfortunately that there is a pretty good chance that I’m not going to be able to save any of your functions below T11.” In other words, I would be paralyzed from my belly button down. I said, “You mean I’ll never dance again?” And he said, “I’m not sure, but I think if you had one working eyelid, you’d still dance.” Which remains one of the best compliments I’ve ever received.
So I went in there knowing there was a good chance that I was going to come out unable to walk again. When I woke up in the recovery room, my doctor was standing at the end of my bed and he said, “John Perry, move your toes.” I did. And he started to cry. Because he had no idea if I was going to be able to do that and this was the only way to find out.
I was recovering from that when they decided they needed to be on the outlook for pulmonary embolisms, so they installed a filter in my vena cava to remove all the phlebitis-style clots from my bloodstream. In what I later learned was yet another iatrogenic failure, they displaced something that lodged itself in what had previously been my main coronary artery.
Later that evening, I was in the middle of an extremely stressful phone conversation with my business partner, who had been instrumental in getting us the money for our pure water project, when I started feeling pain in my chest. I didn’t know what to do about it at first and finally said, “I believe I’ve got to get off this call, I may be having a heart attack.”
And in fact, the lower two ventricles of my heart had just stopped dead in their tracks and I had no heartbeat. So they hauled me off from the company of my daughter Leah and several other folks who had a pretty hard time taking in this spectacle. They took me to a side room and hit me with the paddles. Just like on TV. Nothing. They hit me again with the paddles with twice as much voltage. Nothing. Then they hit me the third time with so much energy that they burned my chest. But it still didn’t start my heart.
Then an amazing thing happened. A young resident grabbed my arm, yanked me off the gurney, flung me to the floor, and jumped on my sternum with both of his knees. And my heart kind of went, “Well, if you’re going to be like that about it, I guess I’ll start beating again.” It was like the cowboy heart reaction. “You hit me, you son of a bitch!”
If people code out for eight minutes like I did and then come back, they usually do so as a different person than the one who left. But I guess my brain doesn’t use all that much oxygen because I appeared to be the same guy, at least from the inside. For eight minutes, however, I had not just been gratefully dead, I had been plain, flat out, ordinary dead. It was then I decided the time had finally come for me to begin working on my book. Looking for a ghost writer was not really the issue. At the time, my main concern was to not be a ghost before the book itself was done.
What amazed me most about this entire incident was that after so many years of thinking I really understood what happened when you died, I had not seen a goddamn thing. No upwardly sweeping rivers of light, no angels, no cherubim, no seraphim, no celestial beings. It all just went black. I’d gone down the tunnel of eternity and it had turned out to be nothing more than a cheap carnival ride to nowhere.
When I told my old friend and songwriting partner Bob Weir about this, he looked at me and said, “Well, it could be that you just weren’t dead enough.”
ONE
THE LITTLE RED BULL
Wyoming is a one-class state, and if you think you’re better than someone else, they will tell you to your face that you’re wrong. My mother, Miriam Jenkins Barlow, would have argued this point with you because, to the extent that there is aristocracy in that part of the world, she was kind of like Wyoming royalty.
Her great-uncle was a cattle baron named Amos Smith, who was the first human being to spend a winter in the high reaches of the upper Green River basin. Not even the Indians had ever tried to do that, but Amos had taken a bunch of cattle in there to graze because the grass was unbelievable. It started to snow early, and he got trap
ped.
I imagine it was a lot like what Hugh Glass, who was my hero when I was about seven years old, went through in The Revenant, with deep snow and lots of wind, but somehow he managed get through it. Having done that, Uncle Amos decided that the upper Green River basin, which was as fair as the garden of the lord and full of tall green grass for two or three months a year, would be wonderful for his cattle, because he could grow hay there and keep cattle year-round.
These were pioneering ideas, and so he hired a bunch of people to homestead for him on 160 acres of sagebrush with barely any water and nothing that you could raise because the entire growing season was about eighteen minutes long. I have actually seen it snow there on the Fourth of July. There’s a joke in Pinedale about a stranger who comes to town shivering and asks one of the locals, “What do you people do around here in the summer?” And the local guy says, “Well, if it falls on a Sunday, we usually have a picnic.”
Uncle Amos never had any children, but he did have three nieces, who were from Burlington Junction, Missouri, and one of them, Eva, married my grandfather Perry Wilson Jenkins, who was an astronomer and a mathematician and an incredible human being if not also terribly likable. Known to one and all as P.W., he had been born in Mount Carmel, Indiana, in 1867. His grandfather had served as an army officer during the American Revolution, and his father had fought in the Civil War. P.W. grew up on the family farm in Butler County, Ohio, and then attended Miami University in Oxford, where he was a member of Phi Beta Kappa and played quarterback on the football team.