Fwd: [AGL] Clark rides off into the sunset, Happy Trails to you...
kathy doyle
kdoyle1 at austin.rr.com
Wed Jan 18 01:14:00 EST 2006
Francis,
> I would like to remind you that Clark did not die of colon cancer, he
> died of pneumonia. So maybe if he just washed his hands more, or used
> a better soap he would be alive? True, he did not have the diet you
> subscribe too, and it may have contributed to his tumor; however many
> people, my father and grandfather, among them, are big meat and
> potatoes and fat eaters, and live healthy lives into their '80's, and
> never develop cancer. And then there's Adelle Davis who ate all
> healthy and died of cancer fairly young any way. Clark lived life
> big, with joy and enthusiasm, and generosity of spirit and I find
> that supremely healthy.
> To me, the tendency to be self righteous and "blame the victim" when
> someone dies, is a childish way of trying to ward off the boogey man,
> to put a safety shield between us and our own death, our own fear and
> maybe even our own grief. To prove WE can outsmart death. It is
> futile to blame the victim as way to insure ourselves against death
> and insensitive and unkind to the deceased, and the survivors. Even if
> you are right and can exactly pinpoint the steak that started it all,
> or the piece of broccoli left on his plate in "93 that spelled his
> doom in '06, I still think it is best left unsaid and unwritten.
> Because the bottom line is, he's still dead and it sucks.
>
> Kathy,
> ( who is sick of hearing people giving her ridiculous reasons for why
> her husband is dead- the worst being "he thought negative")
>
> On Jan 17, 2006, at 9:00 PM, Frances Morey wrote:
>
>> Travis,
>> I saw it coming. Clark was an unreconstructed carnivore, eating
>> mostly meat, most of of the time, and typically more than enough all
>> the time. All-you-can-eat bar-be-cue was his favorite venue. I tried
>> to talk him out of it and he wouldn't hear of it. John Wayne, another
>> colon cancer victim, also acted as though meat was the sine qua non
>> of food.
>>
>> One Thanksgiving in Real de Catorce, I think it was '03, Clark and I
>> walked back to our hotels after one of a half dozen parties. There is
>> no level ground and our path was upgrade all the way. He had to stop
>> and catch his breath about every ten steps. I was barely breathing
>> hard, compared to his panting.
>>
>> I estimate that he was at least 60 pounds overweight
>> then--transporting that much excess, like having a 60 pound bag of
>> corn strapped to his back, 24-7. The stress of that ought to make the
>> pleasure of overeating pale, yet some are not able to make
>> the connection.
>>
>> The first time I met Clark was at a party in my neighborhood when I
>> lived at the corner of W. 22 1/2 and Pearl, newly married. The party
>> over on 23rd Street was so over-the-top-wild that it could be heard a
>> block away and becconed our attendance.
>>
>> Unlike the typical ghetto party of the times there were lots of kegs,
>> bottles of booze, highly amplified live rock music and motorcycles
>> roaring through the house. I had to know who was behind this shadow
>> precurssor of Animal House, and lo and behold, Clark was host.
>>
>> I wondered who had put up the moolah to throw ;such a high
>> dollar shindig. It turned out that Clark had been given $1,500, quite
>> a chunk of change in the '60s, by developers who were consolidating
>> land for Tri Towers North. The money was intended to finance
>> throwing the wildest party ever imagined in all of West Campus.
>>
>> The dies ex machina was that it would persuade Dr. Moore to sell out.
>> He was none other than the extremely biggoted math professor for whom
>> the Robert Lee Moore hall on campus is named. The gambit didn't work
>> and the development domino effect stopped in it's tracks, at Dr.
>> Moore's house.
>>
>> Nevermind the results--these kinds of bold brash highjinks were the
>> embodyment of Clark. He was master of machinations for setting up
>> memorable good times, perhaps second only to the highjinks of Travis
>> Rivers. I found tha t Austin boys always had special accumen in the
>> business of trumping fun. Over the ages and stages we went through,
>> Clark gave me a thousand smiles.
>>
>> Best,
>> Frances Morey
>>
>>
>>
>> Note to Harry: You may forward this to the ghetto2, if you like.
>> Since I got the new ISP, NetZero, I can't figure out how to send
>> outgoing mail.
>>
>>
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