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T.E. Notes
A T.E. Lawrence Newsletter
Volume XIV, No. 2, Autumn
Memorial Service for John E. Mack
by Elaine A. Steblecki
John E. Mack (4 October 1929 -28 September 2004), whose Pulitzer Prize-winning
biography A Prince of Our Disorder, The Life of T. E. Lawrence
was published in 1976, died tragically on the day after the recent T.E.
Lawrence Society Symposium ended, being struck by a car in London. 4
October 2004 would have been his 75th birthday. A Memorial Service for
Dr. Mack, Professor of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, was held
at The Memorial Church at Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts,
on 13 November 2004, 12:00-2:00 pm.
It was an event of remembrance. The Reverend Professor Peter J. Gomes,
of the Memorial Church,gave the Welcome and Closure remarks. In between,
ten speakers offered reminiscences, five of them family members. What
I remember most about the service was all of its description, as speakers
tried to capture, in mere words, the quicksilver that was John Mack.
What follows is not a transcription but a sampling of their remarks,
with occasional reflections of my own.
Danny Mack, John's son, also gave a few welcoming remarks, mostly about
his father's spirituality, perhaps as a preface to the Buddhist chant
that was next on the program. Led by Mu Soeng, it was a prayer and an
exercise in group energy in which we all participated. Danny said that
his father's spirituality, especially later in life, was less about
formal religion and more an open?ended, hands?on, nonjudgmental foray
into such things as shamans, Buddhism, Native American, and aboriginal
Australian spiritualities and what they had to offer. He ranged outside
the inherited JudeoChristian worldview, exploring different modes of
consciousness.
Small wonder. Here was a man whose professional practice had come to
encompass patients who believed they had been abducted by, or had contact
with, alien beings or intelligences. Karin Austin spoke emotionally
at the service, appreciating Dr. Mack's desire to listen when everyone
else simply dismissed her perceived experience as impossible. Mack approached
such stories with detached skepticism, but his willingness to keep an
open mind offered these patients a compassionate haven. He would not
turn them away. Richmond Mayo-Smith, of the John E. Mack Institute,
called him a great humanitarian for wanting to help people in such distress
regardless of the criticism and ridicule it brought him. Mack, as a
scientist, felt the topic warranted clinical study. This took courage.
Mayo-Smith said that Dr. Mack lived a large life, continually exploring
what it means to be fully human, expressing a joy in entertaining new
possibilities, always encountering the questions, 'What do we believe
is real?' and 'How do we know what we believe we know?'
Karin Austin, the only speaker who could testify directly about his
methods and effectiveness with patients, praised Dr. Mack's conduct
in sessions his professionalism, pacing, intelligence, wit, and ability
to be purely present. Though Austin was the sixth speaker and not the
first, I mention Mack's work on the subject of alien abduction first
because the service was infused with everyone's awareness of it whether
speakers alluded to it or not. As a stumbling block, anyone encountering
Mack needed to decide how to respond to it. One could embrace it, ignore
it, continue a relationship despite it, or turn away. Mack's involvement
with this topic challenges the rest of us.
Dr. Mack's final words to colleague Ed Khantzian were, "If anybody asks,
tell them I am not crazy!" Khantzian opened his remarks this way and
called Mack a visionary, caring, and deeply curious man. In the fall
of 1965, Mack asked Khantzian to help him start a psychiatric program
at Cambridge Hospital. During the course of this initiative in community
psychiatry, Khantzian saw Mack as teacher, scholar, and clinician but
also as someone who understood the workings of hospital/community politics
and could manage the "town/gown" tensions between Harvard and the city
of Cambridge. The two men remained friends since. Khantzian said that
Mack sent along two of his "alien books" inscribed for his "continuing
education."
Jon Ingbar, Mack's nephew, remembered from his childhood the warm and
gentle disorder of John and Sally Mack's household. Mack always seemed
different from the other adults he knew: fun, more able to be on his
level, more understanding. From his perspective as an adult, Jon offered
another image that had stuck with him, that of his uncle in a rumpled
raincoat carrying a battered suitcase ? not neat and settled but as
a traveler, always going somewhere, ever searching, restless, eager.
Jon said that Mack did not chart a careful path to success but was pulled
by human connections into perilous areas and allowed himself to respond,
not shielding himself from the consequences of his commitments. Jon
said that there are places in our lives' experiences where the walls
are very thin, and his uncle was an explorer of those thin places, an
admirable calling around which to build a life.
Since Jon did not live in Mack's household, he saw his uncle only periodically
and vividly felt the pattern of his being intensely there, then gone,
intensely there, then gone. A noticeable difference existed between
these striking visits and the rest of his normal life. Jon tried to
describe this, saying his uncle could touch lives in an instant with
the intensity of his presence, and somehow, he could make everything
seem possible. Though Lawrence's name did not surface here, Jon's description
of Mack reminded me of Henry William on's description of T.E. Both Ingbar
and Williamson were aware of the force of an unusual presence and personality,
of a kind intensity, and they both experienced an enlargement of self
from the encounter. David Ingbar, another nephew, said that Mack had
such personal power and charisma that even people who met him only briefly
are feeling some loss now. I could vouch for this, as I thought of those
who attended the T.E. Lawrence Society's Symposium in Oxford in September.
We were an auditorium?full, most of whom did not know Dr. Mack personally,
yet all were doubtless affected by his noteworthy presence, and felt
sadness at the news of his sudden death.
The afternoon's most direct reference to Lawrence came from the first
speaker, Mack's friend and colleague, Robert Lifton. He and Mack sat
in front of the television together as the documentary T.E. Lawrence
and the Battle for the Arab World first aired in 2003, because Mack
appeared as one of the experts or "talking heads" in the program. Mack
had returned to the subject of T.E. Lawrence after a long time away,
and Lifton said that Mack got back into it with great excitement. According
to Lifton, psychiatrists get tired of listening and often get drawn
to some kind of adventurous quest, as a counterbalance. Lifton felt
that Mack's original work on Lawrence had served to satisfy this need.
Several speakers mentioned what might be called Mack's adventurous nature,
but only Lifton discussed it and Lawrence in the same breath. I was
glad that at least one speaker made reference to Mack's current resurgence
of interest in Lawrence.
Mack's son, Ken, indirectly alluded to his father's work on Lawrence
when he distinctly remembered the dramatic contrast of his flunking
out of high school in the 1970s at the same time his father was winning
the Pulitzer Prize (for his biography of T.E., though Ken didn't specifically
say so). Ken related how his father then invited him on a trip to Eastern
Europe which concerned his work in support of nuclear arms control.
Mack figured out how to include his son in his professional work, giving
Ken a memorable chance to go into battle, as it were, alongside his
father, a great warrior, who empowered him and enabled him to find a
sense of purpose. Ken is a lawyer now. Dr. Mack wrote a chapter in his
Lawrence biography called "Lawrence the Enabler." It seems that Mack
was an enabler too.
Dr. Mack, according to his son, Daniel, once said that his family has
been in this country since 1850 and he still feels like an outsider.
Perhaps Mack used this term because he was good friends with Colin Wilson,
whose book, The Outsider, considered this topic and, in fact,
discussed Lawrence. Mack could identify with Lawrence as outsider and,
like Lawrence, was not uncomfortable thinking "outside the box." Being
an outsider gives one a certain freedom. Dr. Mack mentioned this during
the T.E.L. Society Symposium when discussing T.E.'s illegitimacy and
its impact on how he approached the world. David Ingbar also made me
think of Lawrence when he said that Mack felt drawn, in his academic
pursuits, to study people who were martyrs for their causes. Mack had
a picture of John F. Kennedy hanging in his home. David said that his
uncle wanted to change the world. He had incredible focus for things
he was interested in, which was both wonderful and difficult for the
people around him. Sports and children could deflect him, however, and
he rooted enthusiastically for his favorite teams.
Writers about Lawrence often call him compassionate and sensitive, and
so did many of the speakers about Mack. His sons, Ken and Tony, called
him a great crier. Ken said that he even cried at B movies and simple
events. Ken had gone with his father to see Saturday Night Fever
when it was in the movie theatres and almost felt embarrassed to leave
at the end because his must have been the only parent moved to tears
by it. (This drew affectionate laughter from those at the Memorial Service.)
Tony said that his father had represented to him both strength and vulnerability.
He had an exceptionally sensitive nature, with nerve endings more raw
than those of most people. Could one apply the word 'courage' to this
thin-skinned anxious man? Yes. Courage is not lack of fear, it's the
capacity to act in the face of fear. And act he did, approaching his
personal relationships, his work, and everything else with joy and passion.
Tony said it was too bad his father didn't live to see the Red Sox finally
win the World Series, then wondered whether he would have survived the
stress of it?!
Michael Blumenthal, friend of John Mack, talked about the quality of
woundedness in him, calling it a source of strength and compassion,
creating openness to the world and its mysteries. Mack was able to remain
open to feeling and to the wounded, even when mocked and persecuted
for it. He was not perfect but a the more profoundly was a truly good
man, a man of simplicity, humility, purity, piety, lack of affectation,
kindliness, graciousness, and more. And these weren't abstractions for
him. No person or situation could alter the integrity and wholeness
of his central being. Status meant nothing. He didn't care if you were
a Nobel Laureate or a janitor. He respected the right of every soul.
He had an Augustinian sense of humanity. Love means "I want you to be,"
and John wanted us all to be. He will always be here because he was
so vividly present to all who knew him. (Again, I could not help but
recognize Lawrence in this description).
A quartet of oboe, cello, piano and violin performed at the beginning
and end of the service. In the middle, pianist Randy Nickerson performed
Chopin's Opus Posthumous in C# Minor as well as "Composition for John"
that he'd written just after Mack's death.
Reverend Gomes, in his closing remarks, said that of the transition
from this life to the next we know nothing, and John Mack now knows
everything. In the face of the greatest of all mysteries, we stand silent.
Recalling John Mack's spirit and life, we rejoice in what we remember.
I left the service with a stronger impression of Mack the maverick,
who shot through life like a comet, bright, responsive, fluid, daring.
His death was truly a loss for the Lawrence community and for everyone
who knew him or his work.
Elaine A. Steblecki is co-editor of T. E. Notes, a newsletter about
British officer T. E. Lawrence ("Lawrence of Arabia").
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