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Authors: Elizabeth Gilbert

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Well, what of it? My sister and I were encouraged to ignore this reality. We picked blackberries in the ditches alongside
that highway in our handmade dresses while the cars raced by and the passing eighteen-wheelers shook the ground. We went to
school with goat’s milk dried on our sleeves from the morning chores. We were taught to disregard the values of the culture
that surrounded us and to concentrate instead on this sacred and more ancient American tenet: Resourcefulness Is Next to Godliness.

It is probably not surprising, then, that when I turned twenty-two I decided that I would not be satisfied by going on to
graduate school or settling into some respectable career. I had other aspirations. I wanted to learn the boundaries of my
own resourcefulness, and these, I believed, I could learn only in a place like Wyoming. I was inspired by the example of my
parents and by Walt Whitman’s stirring advice to American boys of the nineteenth century: “Ascend no longer from the textbook!
Ascend to your own country! Go to the West and the South! Go among men, in the spirit of men! Master horses, become a good
marksman and a strong oarsman . . .”

I went to Wyoming, in other words, to make a man of myself.

I loved ranch work. I was a trail cook. I was ridin’ horses into the wilderness, I was sittin’ around campfires, I was drinkin’
and tellin’ stories and cussin’ and droppin’ all my
g
’s and basically puttin’ on a classic act of phony authenticity. When strangers in Wyoming asked me where I hailed from, I’d
say, “Lubbock, Texas.” As long as nobody asked a single follow-up question, I was generally able to pass as an authentic cowgirl.
The other wranglers on the ranch even had an authentic cowgirl nickname for me. They all called me Blaze.

But only because I’d asked ’em to.

I was a complete and thoroughgoing faker. But this fakery, I submit, was merely my right and privilege as a young American
citizen. I was following the national ritual. I was no more counterfeit than Teddy Roosevelt had been a century earlier, when
he left New York City as a cosseted dandy and headed West to become a robust man. He sent the most self-satisfied and self-conscious
letters back home, boasting about his rugged experiences, as well as his macho wardrobe. (“You would be amused to see me,”
Roosevelt wrote to one Eastern friend, “in my broad sombrero hat, fringed and beaded buckskin shirt, horsehide chaparajos
or riding trousers, and cowhide boots, with braided bridle and silver spurs.”) I know this letter. I wrote it myself, dozens
of times, to dozens of people. (“I bought a pair of rattlesnake boots last week,” I wrote to my parents from the ranch in
1991, “and I’ve beat them to shit already doing chores in the corral, but, hell, that’s what they’re for.”)

I met Judson Conway the first day I came to the ranch. He was the first thing I set eyes on after that long drive up that
big Wyoming mountain, and I kind of fell in love with him. I didn’t fall in love with Judson like “Let’s get married!” I fell
in love with him like “Mercy!” Because here was Judson Conway at that moment: slim, handsome, hidden slightly under a cowboy
hat, and appealingly dusty. All he had to do was stroll by me with his sexy swagger (classically executed, in the Hollywood
manner of Pardon-me-ma’am-but-I-just-came-off-a-long-ride), and I was a believer.

I was attracted to Judson because I was a girl and he was beautiful and I wasn’t friggin’ blind, but I also recognized in
him an immediate commonality. Like me, Judson was twenty-two years old and a complete and thoroughgoing faker. He was no more
authentically Western than his new friend Blaze. Nor were we more authentically Western than Frank Brown, the other twenty-two-year-old
cowboy working on the ranch. He was a college kid from Massachusetts currently going by the moniker Buck. And then there was
our head cowboy Hank, who’d always holler, “Let’s pound leather, y’all!” when it was time to ride out, but whose father happened
to be the assistant attorney general of Utah. We were all putting on the same show.

But Judson was my favorite, because he enjoyed the show better than anyone. He did have the slight cultural advantage of at
least being from the South, so he could drawl. He was so damn cool. Walt Whitman would’ve loved how Judson was living. He
was mastering marksmanship and oarsmanship, but he had also traveled across America in boxcars and hitchhiked back, had kissed
girls from everywhere, and had learned to be a great storyteller and a talented hunter. And so lucid a horseman! He’d taught
himself tricks like swinging his body up and off his horse while it was running along, and many other diversions that weren’t
entirely practical for ranch work but were most entertaining.

He and I had a ball together two years in a row, out there in Wyoming, and then we went our separate ways. But we stayed in
touch. Like a good Civil War soldier, Judson corresponded eloquently and loyally by post. Never called; always wrote. And
he had a lot to write about, because this was the excellent life he’d made for himself: he spent his springtimes dove-hunting
at home in North Carolina, summers as a fishing guide in Alaska, autumns as an elk-hunting guide in Wyoming, and winters helping
tourists catch trophy fish in the Florida Keys.

“Intent on learning how to fish saltwater and in hopes of getting a job on a charter boat,” he wrote to me, on his first trip
to Florida. “I’m staying with a couple I took horseback riding one day in Wyoming. Got to talking, and here I am . . . Been
spending a lot of time in the Everglades National Park, birdwatching and wrestling alligators.”

“Not making a living,” he wrote, on his first trip to Alaska, “just
living
.”

Judson always swore he’d come and see me sometime in New York City, where I had since moved. (“Does the Hudson have fish in
it?”) But the years passed, and he didn’t swing by, and I never quite expected him to. (“Gettin’ married, huh?” he finally
wrote, after a long letter of mine. “Guess I waited too long to visit . . .”) And then one day, years after we’d last spoken
in person, he called. This was in itself astonishing. Judson doesn’t use telephones, not when there are perfectly good stamps
to be had. But the call was urgent. He told me he was flying to New York the very next day, to visit. Just a whim, he said.
Just wanted to see what a big city was like, he said. And then he added that his older brother, Eustace, would be coming along,
too.

Sure enough, the Conway boys arrived the next morning. They stepped out of a yellow cab right in front of my apartment and
made the most outrageous, incongruous sight. There was handsome Judson, looking like a young swain from “Bonanza.” And there,
right beside him, was his brother, Davy Fuckin’ Crockett.

I knew this was Davy Fuckin’ Crockett because that’s what everyone on the streets of New York City started calling the guy
right away.

“Yo, man! It’s Davy Fuckin’ Crockett!”

“Check out Davy Fuckin’ Crockett!”

“King of the wild motherfuckin’ frontier!”

Of course, some New Yorkers mistook him for Daniel Fuckin’ Boone, but everyone had something to say about this curious visitor,
who moved stealthily through the streets of Manhattan, wearing handmade buckskin clothing and carrying an impressive knife
on his belt.

Davy Fuckin’ Crockett.

So that’s how I met Eustace Conway.

Over the next two days, against the unlikely backdrop of New York City, I heard all about Eustace Conway’s life. One night,
Judson and Eustace and I went drinking in a lowdown bar in the East Village, and while Judson kept busy dancing with all the
pretty girls and telling thrilling stories of life on the range, Eustace sat in a corner with me and quietly explained how
he had been living for the last seventeen years in a teepee, hidden away in the Southern Appalachian Mountains of North Carolina.
He called his home Turtle Island, named for the Native American creationist legend of the sturdy turtle who carries the entire
weight of the earth on his back. Eustace told me he owned a thousand acres of land back there in the woods—a perfectly contained
and unspoiled basin, with a protected watershed.

It seemed curious to me that somebody who eats possum and wipes his butt with leaves could have managed to acquire a thousand
acres of pristine wilderness. But Eustace Conway was, as I would discover, a most cunning man. He had amassed that property
slowly and over time with money he made by going into the local school systems and talking to riveted schoolchildren about
eating possum and wiping one’s butt with leaves. Land, he declared, was his only major expense in life. Everything else he
needed he could make, build, grow, or kill. He hunted for his own food, drank water from the ground, made his own clothing
. . .

Eustace told me that people tended to romanticize his lifestyle. Because when people first ask him what he does for a living,
he invariably replies, “I live in the woods.” Then people get all dreamy and say, “Ah! The woods! The woods! I love the woods!”
as if Eustace spends his days sipping the dew off clover blossoms. But that’s not what living in the woods means to Eustace
Conway.

Some years ago, for instance, out hunting for his winter deer, he came upon a gorgeous eight-point buck grazing through the
brush. He shot. The buck went down. Not knowing if he had killed the animal, he waited and waited to see whether it would
struggle up from where it had fallen and try to run. There was no movement. Slowly, quietly, Eustace crept toward the spot
where the animal had gone down and found the massive buck, lying on its side, breathing a thin, red vapor of blood through
its nose. The animal’s eyes were moving; it was alive.

“Get up, brother!” Eustace shouted. “Get up and I’ll finish you off!”

The animal didn’t move. Eustace hated to see it lying there, alive and injured, but he also hated to blow off its beautiful
head at pointblank range, so he took his knife from his belt and stabbed into the buck’s jugular vein. Up came the buck, very
much alive, whipping its rack of antlers. Eustace clung to the antlers, still holding his knife, and the two began a wrestling
match, thrashing through the brush, rolling down the hill, the buck lunging, Eustace trying to deflect its heavy antlers into
trees and rocks. Finally, he let go with one hand and sliced his knife completely across the buck’s neck, gashing open veins,
arteries, and windpipe. But the buck kept fighting, until Eustace ground its face into the dirt, kneeling on its head and
suffocating the dying creature. And then he plunged his hands into the animal’s neck and smeared the blood all over his own
face, weeping and laughing and offering up an ecstatic prayer of thanksgiving to the universe for the magnificent phenomenon
of this creature who had so valiantly sacrificed its life to sustain his own.

That’s what living in the woods means to Eustace Conway.

The morning after our conversation in the bar, I took the Conway brothers on a walk through Tompkins Square Park. There, I
lost Eustace. I couldn’t find him anywhere, and I got worried, concerned that he was out of his environment and therefore
helpless and vulnerable. But when I found him, he was in pleasant conversation with the scariest posse of drug dealers you’d
ever want to meet. They had offered Eustace Conway crack, which he had politely declined, but he was engaging with them, nonetheless,
about other issues.

“Yo, man,” the drug dealers were asking as I arrived, “where’d you buy that dope shirt?”

Eustace explained to the drug dealers that he had not, in fact, bought the shirt; he had made it. Out of a deer. He described
exactly how he’d shot the deer with a black powder musket, skinned the deer (“with this very knife!”), softened the hide with
the deer’s own brains, and then sewed the shirt together, using strands of sinew taken from alongside the deer’s spine. He
told the drug dealers that it wasn’t such a difficult process, and that they could do it, too. And if they came to visit him
in his mountain home of Turtle Island, he’d teach them all sorts of marvelous ways to live off nature.

I said, “Eustace, we gotta go.”

The drug dealers shook his hand and said, “Damn, Hustice. You something
else
.”

But this is how Eustace interacts with all the world all the time— taking any opportunity to teach people about nature. Which
is to say that Eustace is not merely a hermit or a hippie or even a survivalist. He does not live in the woods because he’s
hiding from us, or because he’s growing excellent weed, or because he’s storing guns for the imminent race war. He lives in
the woods because he belongs there. Moreover, he tries to get other people to move into the woods with him, because he believes
that is his particular calling—nothing less than to save our nation’s collective soul by reintroducing Americans to the concept
of revelatory communion with the frontier. Which is to say that Eustace Conway believes that he is a Man of Destiny.

Eustace created Turtle Island—the thousand-acre perfect cosmos of his own design—as the ultimate teaching facility, a university-in-the-raw,
a wild monastery. Because, after years of studying primitive societies and after countless experiences of personal transformation
within the wilderness, Eustace has formed a mighty dogma. He is convinced that the only way modern America can begin to reverse
its inherent corruption and greed and malaise is by feeling the rapture that comes from face-to-face encounters with what
he calls “the high art and godliness of nature.”

It is his belief that we Americans, through our constant striving for convenience, are eradicating the raucous and edifying
beauty of our true environment and replacing that beauty with a safe but completely faux “environment.”What Eustace sees is
a society steadily undoing itself, it might be argued, by its own over-resourcefulness. Clever, ambitious, and always in search
of greater efficiency, we Americans have, in two short centuries, created a world of push-button, round-the-clock comfort
for ourselves. The basic needs of humanity—food, clothing, shelter, entertainment, transportation, and even sexual pleasure—no
longer need to be personally labored for or ritualized or even understood. All these things are available to us now for mere
cash. Or credit. Which means that nobody needs to know how to
do
anything anymore, except the one narrow skill that will earn enough money to pay for the conveniences and services of modern
living.

BOOK: The Last American Man
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