July 24, 2022
I never thought I’d work in a place where babies are sacrificed, Satan is worshiped, and a small group of billionaires secretly plot to rule the world. But hey – when you have to earn a living, sometimes you need to compromise your ideals.
Every summer for the past 12 years (except during the 2020 and 2021 pandemic) I’ve moonlighted as a food server (the politically correct, gender neutral term for waiter) at the Bohemian Grove, a 2700 acre private men’s club in a redwood forest on the Russian River here in Sonoma County.
But the annual Summer Encampment in July is no ordinary social gathering. It is an exclusive, secluded, storied assemblage of mostly wealthy and/or powerful men from the fields of business, politics, academia, entertainment and media, science, and the military. Originally conceived in 1872 as an association of bohemian writers and artists in San Francisco, early members and honorary members included writers Jack London, Mark Twain, Bret Harte, and Ambrose Bierce. But most of the bohemians did not enjoy the commercial success of London and Twain, and so to support the club financially, wealthy businessmen were invited to join the creative types. Now the rich and influential members outnumber the musician, actor, and singer associate members who perform for the regular members in exchange for reduced membership fees.
I feel obligated to respect the privacy of the members of the society, and so I will not reveal the names of some of the famous people I’ve seen there. However, it is well known that most recent Republican presidents have been members or honorary members, including Theodore Roosevelt, Herbert Hoover, Dwight Eisenhower, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, and George W. Bush. I don’t know if Donald Trump has ever been there, but I wouldn’t be surprised if he has. The most famous Democratic politicians to visit the Grove have been former Attorney General and Senator Robert Kennedy and former California governor Pat Brown. I will add that a few years ago I got into a staring contest with former Defense Secretary and architect of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars Donald Rumsfeld. I lost.
But the Bohemian Grove is not a political or business conclave. It is in my view a benign summer camp for mostly upper class white American men, though in recent years it has slowly added a few black, Asian, and Latino gentlemen, as well as visitors from other countries. Activities include sumptuous dinners and abundant drinking, variety shows, plays, lectures, concerts, sculpture exhibits, swimming, boating, canoeing, and skeet shooting. Because of the escapist, vacation orientation of the get-together, business and political networking is strongly discouraged. Hence the Bohemian motto, “Weaving spiders come not here,” from Shakespeare’s Midsummer Night’s Dream.
One oft-cited, supposed exception to that rule occurred in 1942, when a planning meeting was held in the Grove for the Manhattan Project that led to the development of the atomic bomb. But that little meeting of scientists was held in the Grove for reasons of wartime secrecy and security, and it occurred in September, not during the festive July Encampment.
A more accurate exception was in 1967, when Ronald Reagan reportedly promised Richard Nixon at the Encampment that he wouldn’t run against him for president if Nixon decided to run. But the Summer Encampment is almost always just a place to relax, have fun, and enjoy comradery with fellow club members.
That doesn’t stop right wing and left wing extremists from promoting their paranoid conspiracies about the Grove. One ultra conservative nut case has used the internet to proclaim that the Bohemian Club is part of a secret commission ruling the world. He adds that the Cremation of Care ceremony, a Druid-inspired ritual in which the worldly worries of the members are symbolically burned (not unlike the Burning Man ritual in the Nevada desert), is a sinister form of Satan worship where effigies of babies are sacrificed, and he speculates that real baby corpses might be used. I started to watch his 2 hour video expose of the Grove, but it was so stupid that I couldn’t justify wasting my time on such rubbish.
Besides, I’d rather focus on my experience of being an employee in a sometimes hectic, sometimes relaxed work environment in a magnificent forest of 200′ tall, thousand year old redwood trees. It’s an awe-inspiring backdrop for my inner dramas.
There are times, especially at night, when the Grove reminds me of the Elvish forest communities of Rivendell and Lothlorien in Lord of the Rings, or the magical woodland setting in Midsummer Night’s Dream. In the outdoor Dining Circle where I work, sunbeams stream through the redwood branches in the late afternoon, lighting up occasional clouds of gnats high up in the forest canopy. Dusk gives way to night, when metal candelabras illuminate the dozens of wooden picnic tables in a sea of candlelight shrouded overhead by the dark forest. In some of the nearby camps, lanterns emit a warm glow reminiscent of Buddhist temples I’ve visited in Japan. Laughter of young employees echoes through the wooded, fern-ringed Dining Circle.
And yet, dreamy paradise that it may be, human nature makes things…interesting.
On the surface, the Dining Circle is a harmoniously functioning beehive of a couple hundred red-coated servers, gray-coated bussers, white-coated kitchen staff with blue baseball caps, black-clad stewards (dishwashers), and khaki-wearing managers and interns. And 95% of the time the employees work smoothly as a team. But as in any workplace, especially a fast-paced and at times stressful one, personalities and expectations can collide.
I never thought I’d end up as a fascist waiter. But I have found that working as a food server sometimes brings out my inner autocrat.
I prize order, efficiency, good communication skills, and a conscientious attitude. Woe to any co-worker who fails to live up to my standards. I may or may not say anything to them out loud, but in my mind at least they are damned to perdition.
I’m not alone in my observations or feelings. A manager told me a few days ago that “Some young servers act like homeless, lard-ass zombies.”
In fairness, most of my co-workers do a good or at least decent job. In recent days I’ve had the pleasure of working with James and Ivan, two cheerful, hard-working young Latino men; Justin, a smiling, diligent young black man; and Elise, a bright, industrious young white woman. And a couple of days ago, two club members independently praised me for mentoring my young co-workers.
Even so, I’m sometimes disappointed in my silent impatience, judgementalism, controlling nature, territoriality, and anger toward my fellow human beings in our red server coats. So to compensate for my occasional hyper, driven, and complaining nature, I make it a point to praise and thank my table mates and anyone else I observe who is doing a good job.
Three nights ago I found myself saddled with a table partner who was incompetent, resistant to direction, and toward whom I felt resentment when she kept disappearing. At one point I found her hiding behind a redwood tree, trying to avoid working. After my shift I was still upset when I got home, but I knew I should let go of my resistance to the situation and try to practice forgiveness or at least compassion toward her and toward anyone who offends my sense of right and wrong. The next morning, I awakened with a healing and inspiring dream:
I was with my meditation group in a redwood forest in the hills of the nearby town of Occidental. Then I went for a walk alone in the forest where, to my astonishment, I saw a whale swimming slowly in a stream. The leviathan was mostly above the water line, and I could see one of its eyes as it moved gradually through the water, about a foot from the shore. It was so serene, swimming majestically through the middle of the redwoods. Then I saw a beautiful view through the trees of the Russian River and the Pacific Ocean. I felt so peaceful and happy.
I choose to interpret this archetypal dream as wise advice from my unconscious mind: to be like the whale, strong and serene, as I navigate my sometimes turbulent emotional waters in the Bohemian Grove.
We all have many opportunities for learning lessons about facing our shadow. I’m fortunate that one of my classrooms just happens to be a lovely redwood forest by the Russian River that leads to a nearby pacific sea.