A Wilder Story, or, The BB Gun, The Black Bear, The Soviets, and Me

“You’ll put your eye out.” – A Christmas Story

bear bbgun

Nobody was too concerned with my eyes.  But do NOT make us have to pay for a neighbor’s window.

(This was first published in 2018, but I’ve made some slight edits.  Merry Christmas!)

I’m a believer in Christmas – it’s a time of redemption and rebirth that proves that miracles can happen.  People can escape their past, and become something more than they were before – they can become reborn.  We can become better.  The birth of Christ is an example that we can all be reborn and change our lives in a miraculous and meaningful way.

But, I’m not sure I can recall any particular Christmas miracles.

Oh, wait, here’s one.  It’s mostly true, as well as I can recall, and field-tested to read aloud to your family:

On Christmas Day when I was in second grade, the one thing I wanted more than anything else was . . . a BB-Gun.  No, this is not a remake of A Christmas Story, this is A Wilder Story.  And I was there for this one.

As I recall, this was the last Christmas when we opened Christmas presents on Christmas morning.  In all following years, my older brother John Wilder and I wheedled our parents into a Christmas Eve opening of everything but “Santa” gifts.  We were insufferable.  My brother (really) is also named John Wilder – my parents didn’t want to waste those extra birth announcements they had bought when they could just change the day and year, but that’s another story.

But that particular Christmas morning when I was in second grade I looked down on a real-life lever-action Daisy® BB gun.  It looked like a real rifle even though the wood parts were plastic.  I’d never shot a real rifle before, but I knew that all I wanted for Christmas was that BB gun.  And there it was, all mine, pristine in its oiled metal and plastic perfection.

daisy

It looked very real.  Mine was the one on the bottom.  It was actually mistaken for a real rifle several times.  Mainly by me, because everyone who was an adult could see it was just a BB gun.

“Take care of that, and it’ll last you a long time, Son,” Pop said as he handed me my first gun.  This was the first time he’d said that to me, and I nodded gravely, feeling the responsibility and pride deep inside me.  Pop would later repeat that phrase about boots I got in high school, a Buck© pocket knife I got in fifth grade, and my first car.

I still have the BB gun and the boots.  I lost the knife, probably at school.  It was expected when I was a kid that you had a knife with you if you were in fifth grade, because what if you had to gut a fish during English class?

But I was in second grade, and I had a BB gun.  My BB gun.

And I was ready to use it.  I was given a quick tutorial on how to load it, a list of all the things (mainly windows), people (mainly windows), places (our windows), and forbidden objects (neighbor’s windows) that I shouldn’t even think of aiming my BB gun at, let alone shoot.  I was trusted to take my new BB gun out on a Christmas morning expedition, because it was made clear to me in no uncertain terms that the worst punishment in the world would fall upon me if I shot something I shouldn’t.  I would lose (probably until I was 40) my BB gun, be grounded from TV until I had my own children and probably be branded as a BB abuser for the rest of my life in my Permanent Record.  (For kids:  Permanent Record is now called Snapchat©.)

With the earnestness only a second grader can muster, I put on my deep blue Sears™ parka (the ad said it was designed for pilots stationed in . . . the ARCTIC, you know, where we fought the Soviets to save Santa from becoming, I guess, more Red) with polyester fur trim, and a pocket for pens and pencils on the arm, because where else would you keep pens and pencils except your left arm?  I pulled on my black felt-lined snow boots and stiff green plastic gloves, and went outside.  It was cold, certainly below freezing, and probably hovering around zero in non-communist units.

sears

Like a pocket knife, every boy had a parka like this.  Every boy. But does anyone know why pilots need parkas if they’re in heated jet airplanes??  Oh, yeah.  Soviets.  Image from E-Bay.

It had already snowed enough that the snow pile in our front yard was 10 feet (43 meters) deep, but we had a packed trail where our snowmobiles had gone onto the snow-packed country road and up into miles of forest roads that dated back to the old prospectors looking for gold.

My feet crunched in the snow as I walked due north onto the road, my breath puffing out as if from a small blue fake-fur-trimmed steam engine headed uphill.  I kept going.  What was I looking for?  I’m not sure – I don’t remember, exactly.  I guess, looking at stuff with a BB gun in my hand and shooting anything that wouldn’t get me in trouble with Ma Wilder at the rate of 6 BBs per step.  But I felt like a man, and what would a man with a rifle do?  Hunt.  Win World War II again.  Look for communists.  It’s hazy, but I know I had a purpose.

Snakes weren’t a possibility, since I knew snakes wintered in Florida with baseball players, Santa and Cubans.  Regardless, I wanted to shoot my BB gun, even if the opportunities to send Soviets back to Russia with a backside full of BBs was limited, at best.  I still don’t recall ever seeing a Soviet in the forest until I saw Red Dawn, and then my BB gun was at home.

reddawn

I guess Europe decided to sit this one out.

I trundled up the road.  I think that’s probably the only time I’ve used the word “trundled” precisely since it implies I moved along slowly, noisily, and in a less than graceful manner.  All of those applied.  But I was ten feet tall with my BB gun, shooting aimed fire into snowbanks and sage brush alike.  About a half a mile from my house, more than three-quarters of the way to the Old Cemetery, I saw it.

The Bear.

Sitting motionless, huddled against the barbed wire fence, not 20’ away, was the bear.  It was a black bear.  I knew that grizzly bears had been killed nearby, but this was definitely a black bear, being black and all.  Ma Wilder had told me about them before going hiking and told me to never, ever get between a black bear cub and its mother – she said that was more dangerous than being between Beto O’Rourke and a microphone.

I didn’t know if this bear was cub-sized or mother-sized, but I already knew that this was something way out of my experience level – I mean I still wasn’t even coloring within the lines very well.  Communists?  Sure, I could take down a dozen of them since they were weak because they were Godless and fatherless and mainly starving when they weren’t swilling massive quantities of cheap Afghan vodka.

But bears?  Better call the reinforcements (spelled D-A-D) in.

wilderbear

Calling out an APB on a tiny blonde boy.  He looked tasty.

I backed away from the bear, keeping my eyes on it the whole time.  My BB gun was loaded, a precious brass sphere ready to explode outward on a column of pressurized air at the bear should it charge me.  I knew I was too slow to out-trundle the bear.  Even my candy-cane addled brain knew that the BB was scant protection against a bear, but if I was going to go down, I was going to go down fighting like a man, and not running away like a weak Soviet child would.  Even though it was nearly zero, I built up a sweat in my green turtle neck under my Air Force Pilot Parka®.

That green turtle-neck was really tight and made me look a lot like an actual turtle, so I only wore it three times.  Why?  A chubby kid covered in the smell of fear sweat and Nacho Cheese Doritos™ isn’t really a winner with the ladies despite whatever Bill Clinton might say.

An aside:  In the safe realm of 2018, I know that it seems insane to allow a second grader to hike up into the forested wilderness alone at temperatures near zero on Christmas morning armed with a weapon that’s patently illegal to arm a second grader with in New York City, and twenty other states that are, no doubt, now deeply under the influence of the Soviets.  Or, does it?   When I last had a second grader (Pugsley) he had a BB gun and trundled off into the backyard with a zillion BBs.  I can attest our backyard is now safely Soviet-free.  But back in the day?  We weren’t building weak Soviet children.  No!  We had backbones of steel and cheap Taiwanese Rambo® knives with compasses built into the handle.

So, yeah, not unusual.  I guess it was a crazy thing called freedom.  Anyway . . .

I got back to the house and threw open the door.  I stamped my snow-covered feet inside.  Yeah, I know, bad form.  But I was in a hurry, I had real news and information for the family.

My parents were lounging on the couch, enjoying a quiet coffee.

“A BEAR!”  I yelled.

“I swear, I saw it, a bear!  It was just right up the road, right where the hill starts.  A bear!  A black one!”

Ma looked at Pop, concerned.

Pop Wilder shook his head.  “Bears are hibernating.  None are up this time of year, not when it’s this cold.”

“No, it was there, right by the fence.”

Ma Wilder nudged him, seeing the absolute certainty on my face.  “We should take a look.”

There is a look a man gives a woman when he knows that he has lost the argument even before it started.  I know that look because I saw it then.  Pop sighed, got up, and got dressed.  Half an hour later, he and Ma and my brother were all dressed, and ready to go up the road.  I had my BB gun.  I hoped that the bear would still be there.

We walked.  I pointed, when the Bear came into sight, not 300 yards away.

“See, I told you.”

Ma Wilder looked concerned when she saw visual proof of my story.  I think she had put my bear story into the category of “addled ravings of an overly imaginative eight-year old that may or may not process reality like a normal human after he told me that he was worried that Grandma would turn into a zombie (Sleep Deprivation, Health, Zombies, and B-Movies).”

As for me, I was concerned that Pop hadn’t brought bazookas, howitzers, grenades, or maybe a battleship.  Nah, Pop Wilder could probably wrestle a dozen or so bears, if they came up to him one at a time, like in the Kung Fu movies.  We finally got up to the road where we were perpendicular to the black bear, still huddled up against the fence, not 30 feet (432 meters) away.  It hadn’t moved since I’d first seen it.  I felt . . .vindicated, even though I’d never heard the word.

“Hand me the BB gun,” said Pop Wilder.

I did.

Pop shot one BB into the bear, smoothly worked the lever like a cowboy in the Old West, and then shot another BB into the bear.

The bear was motionless.  It must be dead!  Pop Wilder killed it!  Pop handed the BB gun back to me.

He then walked back into the deep snow directly to the bear, reached out, and pulled up the black plastic sheeting that had blown into a ball up against the fence.

He handed me back the BB gun and handed my brother the black plastic sheet.  We walked home in silence.

So, there was that:  the Miracle of the Transubstantiation of the Bear – where a Christmas miracle transmuted a black bear into a sheet of black plastic.  Not sure of any other explanation.

But the real Christmas miracle, it’s below.  Merry Christmas to all.

Christmas

Author: John

Nobel-Prize Winning, MacArthur Genius Grant Near Recipient writing to you regularly about Fitness, Wealth, and Wisdom - How to be happy and how to be healthy. Oh, and rich.

32 thoughts on “A Wilder Story, or, The BB Gun, The Black Bear, The Soviets, and Me”

  1. Nice story John.

    I also had a BB gun in the second grade. Too poor to actually have any BBs, but it was cocked and fired none the less. It was a Daisy Red Rider, a hand me down from my aunt. Yes, my aunt as a kid was a fun toter, but now a raving liberal. My bother and I enjoyed that rifle for a decade.

    Now my current city declares simple possession of a BB gun a felony (no joke). Off course, this is the sinister city that increased the sales tax 12% on the very afternoon of 911. “Never let a crisis to to waste.”

  2. One Christmas when I was 13 or 14 my parents indulged my photography hobby with a Polaroid instant camera. I took it out on an expedition like yours, sure I now had the gear to become the next Ansel Adams. Who I knew of and admired, thinking then and now that his Moonrise Over Hernandez is the greatest photograph ever taken. How hard could it be for me to take an equally iconic snapshot like that? So there I was, walking through woods blanketed by a thin crust of snow, taking high contrast black and white photos lovingly warmed as they developed in that freezing aluminum clamshell thing stuck in my armpit just as the instructions directed for cold weather use. Then I too came across an animal – one of my uncle’s cows, who had just given birth to a calf. First time I had ever seen that – the miracle of birth in the muffled quietness of snow. It was a special and serene moment that I still remember well.

    Merry Christmas, everybody!

    1. That’s a wonderful story. In our house, Pugsley has “The Eye” and can create great photos. Me? I can create lots of photos.

  3. My BB gun story didn’t have a bear. It did have older brothers, since the BB gun was a joint present, and I knew my share of time with it would be limited to when it was either worn out, or had no BB’s. I think that’s the only Christmas I remember as a child, but it was a good one, since I learned an important lesson about life. I don’t think it was the lesson my parents hoped for.

    Merry Christmas! and watch out for bears.

    1. I almost lost the BB gun – after Ma Wilder got very mad after she vacuumed up a zillion BBs that were in our (orange) shag carpet.

      Yes. It was bright orange shag carpet.

      1. Good times and great memories but you left out the part where you quickly ran out of BB’s and it seemed like weeks before anymore were purchased. I wore out both of my BB guns. The funniest thing was years later Dad would be walking across our guacamole colored shag carpet barefoot and all of the sudden “oh, i found another BB”. I would just laughed because he was a funny story telling machine but then he would pick the BB out and hand it to me.

  4. One autumn day, I was driving my young son home from school in our leafy suburban neighborhood. “Look! A bear!” he exclaimed. I’ve seen lots of deer, a few foxes, an opossum, and have heard reports of a coyote, but… we’re inside the Washington DC Beltway. Black bears are common in the mountains, 100 miles away, not here. “Really?” “Really! It went behind that house.” Well, there is a high-voltage power-line right-of-way running out into the wilder parts of the state, and I guess if the deer can use it, a wandering bear could, too. So, we drove slowly around the block, trying to see the bear.

    It turned out to be a somewhat bulky neighbor, with bushy black hair, wearing a black sweatsuit. And I think she gave us a “what are YOU looking at?” glare in the moment before I focused back on getting us home.

    1. Personally, I am glad they gave me the Wilder parts of the state.

      Ha!

      There are a couple of jokes here . . . “It’s coming right for us!” is one . . .

  5. I also had the BB rifle that looked like a Winchester. It made the strangest sound when fired.
    Sorta like a cross between a Goose honking and slamming a screen door.

  6. Got mine in ’55 or ’56. I got deadly with that thing. Rang Grandma’s doorbell with it. That was a no-no. Took 2 weeks allowance to replace it. Still have it & it still works. They made them to last in those days.

  7. Bought my first BB gun about two years ago. Guns weren’t really a thing around our house. And when I say “weren’t really a thing” I mean that there were no guns, no discussion of guns, not wishing for guns allowed. I did discover a few years ago that an air rifle of some sort is a really good way to see if you are developing a flinch from shooting high caliber. I pull the BB gun out a couple times a year just to remind myself.

    Weird that this posted as “anonymous” instead of heresolong.

    1. Hey!

      Pa Wilder loaded every 30-06 shell like he was getting ready to hunt elk. The first time I ever shot factory loads, I was shocked that shooting didn’t have to hurt.

  8. Bought my oldest a pellet gun for his 9th birthday, we went out behind the barn to shoot it and when he dropped the cellophane wrapper off the box of pellets on the ground his 5 year old brother said don’t do that it will make the planet get hotter. That’s when I knew it was time to get them out of government schools.

    1. Yikes!!!

      Yeah, we have had those conversations around the house. Either they believe me, or they don’t bring it up. And you’ll love Monday’s post.

  9. No BB gun – or .22 (my dad thought with no recoil a kid would treat a gun like a toy). Got a .410 single shot for my 10th birthday. Just enough kick to ensure I respected it and as a single shot I had to aim true to make every shot count. Taking my first pheasant was memorable. That was a well thought out exercise.

    1. Very nice! I’ve never shot a .410 – though some of my friends brought (active) shells to school when they were in 5th grade.

      And we didn’t kill each other. Shocking.

  10. My fourth grade teacher confiscated my plastic Sten gun with detachable mag that shot little yellow BBs. Best of all…it wasn’t made in China. (Thanks Tricky Dick Nixon)
    Pappy got me an Army training purposes only exact specs with no detachable mag AK-47 made of foam/rubber and a sheriff once stopped because he thought it was real as I was playing in the yard before it became the particle board subdivision eyesore stripmallville as part of the fundamental transformation. He didn’t even confiscate it and went on his way with a nod and a wave.
    What a privilege (wayciss!) it was to have lived in the real America.
    Late night teevee was the best with The Rat Patrol, Wild Wild West and Benny Hill, followed by the National Anthem and then it was test pattern time.

    1. I had a plastic M-16 that I took on the school bus when I was spending the night with a friend so we could play army at his house. No orange tip.

  11. Well, introductory BB rifle memories … mine’s a painful one. Mine didn’t involve either CO2 or compressed air. I believe the propulsion actually came from a spring. I was just a little-bitty engineer at the time, 8 or 9 years old. I was turned loose with it, after some instruction that I probably paid little attention to. After shooting it some, I squeezed the trigger and no BB came out. What to do was, I suppose, covered by those instructions I’d cleverly ignored. I figured, pull the trigger and no BB comes out, better try it again. After four or five futile repeats, I thought they must be stuck in the barrel somehow. Being a stupid little snot, I figured the remedy for that might involve banging the muzzle against the sidewalk to shake those hypothetical stuck BBs out. After some of that, the rifle didn’t work any better, and the muzzle was looking pretty banged-up, too. I let it rest overnight, but it didn’t heal itself; next day, it still wouldn’t shoot. So, I took it to my dad: “It won’t shoot.” He had a quick look at the gun, and then a longer look at me, then started surgery on the weapon. Looking over his shoulder, I asked, “What’s wrong with it?” I can still hear his reply: “This would be a good time for some discreet silence on your part.”

    Looking back, I have to think I was a mystery to my old dad in some ways. I looked quite a bit like him; I could do math like him (and, in time, better). But he was a tool and die maker who knew how to talk to machinery, and machinery liked him and was cooperative. Me … I might as well have had five thumbs on each hand, and machinery has a tendency to laugh at me. Which all goes to show, I guess, that genetics is a complicated business. I do miss my old man, though. And I really wish, for his sake, that I’d been a more responsible owner to my first gun. For what it’s worth, I’ve gotten way better about that gun thing.

    1. That was a 10/10 Dad comment. Showed complete knowledge of what went on, and told you how men act.

      10/10.

      I’d bet you’re better now. And, yup, The Boy is . . . different, but Pugsley is nearly a carbon copy.

    1. Thanks, Nick. And, seriously, 100% true. Pa was not particularly happy that day . . . I think his agenda was sitting by the fireplace watching football.

  12. This bb gun child of the 80’s.would have been wearing the moon boots for that adventure. Great story very funny!

    1. I’ve been noodling about that idea – I think I’ll pick it back up . . . (I started a card catalog of posts so I could pick ’em.)

Comments are closed.