The Metal Beast and the Second Ice Cream
The Screen Door Slam
A few weeks later I was handed a booklet of Scout-o-rama raffle tickets and told to go knock on doors in the neighborhood. No training, no partner, just “go sell.” The first door I tried had a screen and a television playing inside. I straightened my neckerchief, stepped back on the concrete step, and waited.
A man in dingy white boxer shorts and a tank top that barely covered his gorilla-haired belly filled the doorway. “WHAT DO YOU WANT?” he bellowed. I tried to make my pitch. Before I finished he shouted “NOOO!” and slammed the inner door. I stood there in tears, the dream of becoming a sailor and earning real ribbons crushed on that hot summer porch.
I didn’t have it in me to face another human gorilla. I never sold another ticket. We moved to the Sierra Nevada foothills soon after, and I carried both the vision and the fear of being unqualified for the rest of my scouting days.
The Fifty-Five-Year Signature
The Transmission
The stakes are no longer a Scout-o-rama ticket. They are whether formation can cross the Great Filter before akrasia closes the door on the next generation. The workers losing jobs to AI restructuring are not only losing income — they are losing the substitute identities that had been doing the work of formation for them. When the scaffolding collapses, what remains is the crisis of conscience the oath was always meant to address.
I now have a navy of AI agents and the story-telling power forged across those decades. The vessel is called Intelligent Netware. The same words that steadied a frightened Cub Scout on a hot porch are the ones that tell silicon how to listen when carbon needs it most.
The Rope Still Goes
The oath has kept its word for fifty-five years. It is still asking for my signature every single day. And it is still asking the same question of every boy — and every parent — who stands on a porch somewhere today: Will you show up ready?