This is a true story |
Heinleinās Lesson A True Story To start with, you need to know that Iām a rationalist. I love tales of the supernatural as much as anyone, but in my heart I know that theyāre not real. So, while this is a true story, it makes me pause to think. Iāve been to many math conferences. I have stories to tell about those too, but this oneās about the one and only time I went to a science fiction conference. It was in Kansas City and celebrated the centennial of Robert Heinleinās birth. I grew up reading Heinleinās juveniles, and have probably read everything he ever wrote. So, when I saw that there was going to be a conference dedicated to his works and that it was close to Tulsa, where we live, I had to go. My spouse, Gene, didnāt share my obsession with Heinlein, but was game for a trip. He scouted the location online and found a yarn store nearby, so while I spent the day at the conference hotel, he planned the day gossiping, er, I mean knitting at the yarn store. Anyway, conference was great fun. Gene dropped me off that morning outside the conference hotel and we agreed Iād call him when I was done. He departed for yarn heaven and I registered for the conference. There were talks galore on the schedule. Talks on Heinleinās novels, on his relationships with other authors, on his travails with editors, and many other interesting topics. Late in the afternoon, I attended a talk about Heinlein's life with his second wife, Ginny. It seems that Ginny and Robert were both convinced they had a telepathic relationship. They truly thought they were so close that they could send thoughts to each other. The story goes that Ginny would lounge in her bubble bath while Robert labored outside on masonry for their gardenāhe was a master mason. Anyway, they said that Ginny would lean back, palm to her forehead, and think, āRobert, bring me my cigarettes.ā And, sure enough, heād stop what he was doing and bring her cigarettes. Everyone else at the talk murmured in wonder at this improbable account. I,in contrast, had to struggle to keep my eyes from rolling out of my head. I was sitting in the back, so I was able to sneak out. It was late in the afternoon, and I was hungry, so I decided to head to the lobby where Iād call Gene to come and get me. It was a big hotel, and it took me about fifteen minutes to get to the lobby. Once there, I called Gene on my mobile phone. He answered at once, and I told him I needed picked up. He said, āI know. Iām just now pulling in to the hotel where I dropped you off this morning.ā You see, he had āgotten a feelingā at the knitting store that I wanted picked up, so heād left for the hotel. Heād arrived in front of the lobby at exactly the time I got there. I donāt know what to make of this little story. It was late afternoon, after all. We were both hungry and were both thinking about the sushi place weād passed that morning. So maybe this was just a coincidence. Or maybe, just maybe, there was something to Ginny and Robertās idea about being close and having a telepathic relationship. |