Spc 4 Michael Murphy - Draftee

The inside story and private journal behind the Novel MENTAL HYGIENE as told by Michael Murphy

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Favorite Songs '66-68

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Sounds of Silence
Wouldn't It Be Nice
Respect 
Born to Be Wild
19th Nervous Breakdown  
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
White Rabbit 
Light My Fire
Get Together  
Abraham, Martin, and John
Dock of the Bay 
For What It's Worth  
All Along the Watchtower 
Brown Eyed Girl 
Soul Man  
I Can See For Miles 







 
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PROLOGUE

Thomas Hunt : San Francisco – March 2011

In January 2007, as I was cleaning out my Aunt Denise's attic, I came across a suitcase. It contained three thick journals and some scribbled poems and lyrics.

The journals chronicled the life and, as I was later to discover, extraordinary times of a man named Michael Murphy.
When I asked my aunt about the suitcase, she chuckled cryptically, admitting that Murphy had given her the contents of the suitcase during a drunken escapade in the mid-nineties, with specific instructions to maintain his privacy until he was deceased. She added that Murphy was a longtime friend and a person who guarded his privacy. Although the public found him somewhat fascinating, Murphy had generally kept most of his personal business out of the public eye.

“We were very close in another life,” she mumbled, blushing. “I was the lucky runner-up.”

I was embarrassed to ask what she meant, and promised to put the suitcase back where I had found it. After closing up the attic, I googled Murphy and found no meaningful personal information. Enormously successful in the music business, he’d resided in L.A. Wikipedia listed hit songs he had written, and I heard of a few, but held none in my own collection.

So Michael Murphy was soon forgotten.
Aunt Denise passed away in September 2009. As her only heir, I took possession of her estate. The suitcase and its unread contents remained in the attic, untouched. I felt a renewed eagerness to review my inheritance, as now there was no one to deny me.

I spent the next three months reading and digesting Murphy’s memoirs. I was especially fascinated by his experiences as a draftee during the Vietnam War, experiences painted against socially tumultuous events in our country. I spent evenings lost in dark comedy, romance, social upheaval, and even murder. I wondered how those times affected the rest of his adult life, and how he must have felt living in today’s soullessly acceptant USA.

I sadly put the suitcase away, keeping my dead aunt’s promise of privacy, and thought little about it. That changed in June 2010, when I read in the newspaper that Murphy had disappeared. Dead or alive somewhere, he became a momentary celebrity. The media loves these kinds of events, and Murphy held the evening news throne for three days, until the latest outburst of tornadoes in Arkansas ousted him. I returned to the suitcase and made a decision that I hope is the right one.

I contacted a writer friend of mine in Southern California, and he spent a couple of weeks poring over the journals. In the end, he asked permission to write Michael Murphy’s tale.

He reasoned that a compelling story appeared in the historical and military parallels between Murphy’s experience working in a Mental Hygiene Clinic at Ft. Jackson in 1967-68, and events like the tragedy at Fort Hood in 2009, where 13 were killed and 29 wounded by an Army psychiatrist. That, coupled with current weekly national news accounts about the high rate of PTSD and suicide among returning troops from Iraq and Afghanistan, and the military’s inability to cope with the situation, felt like cultural deja vu. In over forty years, nothing had really changed.

I gave my blessing to my writer friend to write the first, unknown part of Michael Murphy’s odyssey. And as Murphy might add, “Nobody gets away unscathed.”


The Vietnam Antiwar Movement

The Vietnam Antiwar Movement
Inside the Military (click)

Blog Archive

MENTAL HYGIENE

MENTAL HYGIENE
a novel (click for excerpt)

WOODSTOCK LINK

WOODSTOCK LINK
3 Days of Peace & Music (click)

The Real "Dr. Howard Shore" (click)

NAM (click on pic)

Michael Murphy - 1969

Basic Trainees Ft. Jackson

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Timothy Dean Martin
Novelist, poet, songwriter, and journalist, I bring over four decades of experience to the written page. I just finished Mental Hygiene, a coming of age novel set in Fort Jackson, SC circa 1967-68.
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