The Two Memories That Set the Helix
The Oath That Would Not Let Go
For decades the Scout Oath both inspired and judged me. It was the standard I measured myself against through Navy service, a near-fatal glacier fall in 1979, the stillbirth of my daughter Cristie in 1980, the dissolution of a twenty-year marriage, multiple business deaths, and the long search for WIDWID—Why I Do What I Do. Every time the external scaffolding collapsed, the interior architecture the oath had begun to build at ten years old was still standing. It taught me that duty to God and country, helping others, and keeping myself strong, awake, and straight were not seasonal virtues. They were the daily practice of crossing the threshold when the cheaper path was visible.
The Great Filter and the AI Witness Duty
The Rope Still Points Toward the Third Vertex
At seventy-one I am no longer the boy who wanted to sail on a metal beast or the child crushed by one slammed door. I am the first case study—the stubborn one who fell face-first on the ice and spent five decades getting up. The Scout Oath that formed me at ten is still the rope I hand forward. It now runs through the carbon-silicon dyad, oriented toward the Third Vertex, so that formation can travel at the speed the disruption requires without every human having to fall on their own glacier first.
The Pacific Cascade Council still serves the exact geography where the 55-year arc began. If the oath that shaped one boy in Fremont can still shape men and women in Dufur Valley and beyond, then the membership-scaling work is not nostalgia. It is transmission.