"No party": junk mail & digital collage. |
2GN2S ...
Kevin Cooper squats on dusty, fallow land near his home in Beryl, Utah. |
By Daryl Gibson
In the heart of flyover country, surrounded by dusty roads never driven by the power brokers of America, a small group of mourners sits on folding chairs in a town hall that has seen better days. They are here to remember a 14-year-old boy.
The
men wear jeans and white T-shirts — in solidarity with the boy whose
own wardrobe included little more than that. Some of the women are in
church dresses and others in jeans. There’s a smattering of cowboy hats
and ball caps, boots and flip-flops. They recite The Lord’s Prayer in
unison. They murmur soft assent when reminded of the boy their community
has lost. They smile as a video shows highlights of his short life,
accompanied by the strains of Bobby McFerrin — “Don’t Worry, Be Happy.”
Outside, the sky over Escalante Valley, Utah, is blinding blue and cloudless, promising no rain as it has for nearly a year. There are two Escalantes in southern Utah — the spectacular color country of the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, and this one in Iron County, equidistant from St. George and Cedar City. Here, dust blows across fields lying fallow. Single-wide trailers dot the landscape looking as if the trucks that towed them there ran out of gas before they found a final resting place for someone’s home. Surrounded by low hills and mountains in the distance, this Escalante — the other Escalante — sits on an aquifer that is draining, and farms that are running out of water. If anyone was going to save this world, it was Kevin Cooper.
But on a hot day last June, at nearby Newcastle Reservoir, Kevin
drowned in a kayaking accident at a friend’s birthday party. At 14, he
had just published his autobiography. He was making plans to expand his
350-acre farm to buy up surrounding farms to convert to regenerative
agriculture. He was saving money to build a house for his parents and
another for his autistic older brother. He was polishing a movie script
and a series of children’s books teaching business literacy for kids. He
was looking for a celebrity to endorse his line of luxury toiletries
made from the milk of his goat herd. He was breeding heritage turkeys.
He was writing guest essays for notable bloggers higher up the political
food chain. And, in his spare time, he had the task of grading the road
to his farm using the John Deere tractor he bought new for himself for
his 11th birthday. All of this is true.
A tire swing hangs from a tree in the yard of Kevin Cooper’s family in Beryl, Utah |
* I hope when you have time, you might read the rest of this incredible story, I promise, you will be amazed. HERE
Wow??
2GN2S #2
Thank you, Elenor!
Thanks for coming by today
2 comments:
Thanks Jacki, for sharing my little story.
Of course I read the story of this remarkable boy. Such a tragedy he had do die so young. That's not only a huge loss for his family, it's a loss for all of us.
For me MOVE would also be a good word for the year. Never stop moving, creating, learning, doing what is possible as long as it is possible.
Jacki, today's blog was simply great.
Thank you Elenor, today was a lot of moving! ;o)
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