Part 22 (1/2)

”You should feel good about yourself,” he said pleasantly.

”You are making some definite progress.”

14. Bicycle Ride--St. Ignes

Two weeks into the cross-country bicycle trek, I pedaled from Utica, New York, to Rochester, where I stayed with Noah, a childhood friend.

When I told him the story of my years with Atmananda, he congratulated me for having left what sounded to him like an abusive marriage.

In fact, he was surprised that Atmananda did not have s.e.xual relations with the men disciples as a way to control them. He also pointed out that while in medical school, he had observed self-proclaimed incarnations of Jesus Christ at psychiatric wards.

”How can you be sure that someone *isn't* enlightened?” I asked, puzzled by the certainty with which Noah expressed his opinions.

”How can you be sure that someone *is*?” he replied.

I thought about the visit as I continued the journey west to Detroit.

Noah's reluctance to give a person or an idea the benefit of the doubt, and the scrutiny with which he questioned words such as ”enlightenment,”

seemed bizarre but not entirely unnatural, like a trusted habit long forgotten.

Several days later, I rushed down a long hill in northern Michigan toward an oncoming truck. It was twilight.

The trailer suddenly hit a b.u.mp, swung out from behind the bicycle, and slammed into my rear wheel. I nearly fell from the impact.

Then I lurched forward as the trailer disengaged.

”Nuna!” I cried, glancing back, but the wheel had stopped spinning and it took my full attention to balance the skidding, swerving bicycle. Moments later the truck smacked me with a wall of air as it thundered by, and the bike quickly came to a halt.

I ran up the hill to the wayward trailer and found Nunatak peering out from the doggie-carrier. She tilted her head as if to ask, ”Is this something all huskies go through?”

I sat with the pup in the tall gra.s.s. I was devastated. The rig was the vehicle I had chosen to exercise and exorcise my body and mind.

It was also my means of transportation. Now, it was broken.

As the sky went from deep purple to black, the memory of Atmananda calling me his ”chemical experiment” seemed to usher in the darkness.

Other recollections bubbled up from the murky depths, only to burst into vivid, unnerving images. Here was Atmananda telling me that he was a professional, that I was extremely sick, and that he was going to help me. Here he was telling me to swallow my pride.

And here he was telling me to swallow the Stelazine.

Cars zoomed by now and then, dispelling apparitions of my former mentor.

Headlights flashed an angry light at the severed trailer, the pretzel-shaped wheel, and the fallen gear strewn in disarray.

Then the lights were gone, leaving behind a fiery-comet afterimage.

I wondered why Atmananda had fed me the drug. Did he actually believe that he was helping me? If so, why didn't he recommend that I seek guidance outside his direct sphere of influence?

It seemed more likely that, unable to tell the difference between helping and controlling people, he gave me the drug to strengthen his grip on my mind. But I suspected another motive.

I knew that Atmananda had often used me as a sounding board for new ideas and, later, for LSD. He may have wanted to observe my reaction to the Stelazine before using it on others--or on himself.

As I meditated on Atmananda's possible motives, I swatted mosquitos and picked at scabs of aging stings. I did not yet know that he had given Stelazine to at least one other inner circle follower.

I tried to remember how I had felt during the Stelazine experiment.

I recalled feeling dizzy. I also recalled feeling at peace with myself.

The conflict between my rational and mystical natures did not seem to matter. Nothing seemed to matter.

”You're doing fine, kid,” Atmananda had told me each day.

”Just go with the flow and enjoy the process.”

Stunned by the memory, I held the husky in my arms.