June 30, 2023

Dead Whispers

by Dymitri Haraszewski (author's profile)

Transcription

Dymitri Harszewski Blog #1660

6-8-23

Dead Whispers

If you look through the Authors List on this site, you should find the name William Goehler. He went by "Whispers." He's dead now.

I don't meant to sound callous, it's just a fact. Whispers himself probably would've accepted the unvarnished directness. In his honor, then, I'll continue in that vein.

Quite honestly, Whispers wasn't my favorite person. He had more than a touch of arrogance and though I'd stop short of calling him a bully (a much overused word these days), plenty of people would not unreasonably disagree with me. No doubt he could sometimes use his 6'3" stature a bit coercively, and for sure he frequently abused many cellmates and neighbors by aiming and discharging his assault weapon (AKA ghetto blaster radio) directly at them. Sure, that's standard prison selfishness. But I still hold all that unnecessary suffering against him.

And even right here on this site, Whispers lobbied some nasty attacks towards certain commenters for their religious beliefs and/or negative opinions of his beloved Scientology, all of which seems pretty low to me. I wouldn't be surprised at all if he and Tenzin were buddies here, as they certainly shared some troll tendencies.

That said, Whispers never did me any harm, personally, though I fear I may have wronged him once or twice by failing to answer his letters to me. In my defense, those letters seemed to be little more than efforts to further involve me with his Scientology projects after I'd moved. Although I've never especially disliked Whispers, I'd been happy enough to get away from his incessant recruiting efforts, so I wasn't about to indulge his obsession through the mail. All in all though, he never treated me poorly and we even had some interesting conversations together.

I suppose from my experience with him, I'd mostly characterize him as quiet, and not only because of the tracheal injury that gave him his nickname. My impression was of a certain aloofness that kept him from displaying much of that obnoxious bluster that characterizes so many prisonese people trying to hide their low self-esteem. No one would've accused Whispers of low self-esteem, though who can say what frailties lurk in people's private hearts?

My view of Whispers (I think much like most people's view of most other people) was relatively one dimensional. I saw and mostly accepted the persona he put forth for public consumption, which was colorful for sure but also kind of stoic. Whispers never seemed to need anyone or be moved by anything. He once mocked a little Buddhist aphorism I'd shared with him about the value of compassion and sympathy, saying something about the root of the word sympathy coming from the word "pathetic." Despite his dubious etymological analysis (or perhaps because of it), I still took him at face value.

I should have known better.

By all accounts, Whispers killed himself after hearing his son had OD'd. The loss was apparently just too much for him, and that reveals something about the guy I'd never seen because he went to such lengths to conceal it. Whispers DID feel, and did care.

Of course he did. He was human.

Prison encourages and sometimes even demands a level of psychological self defense, and Whispers was well-armored in this way but ultimately little different from anyone else. His very effort to be seen as such is the strongest evidence belying his façade. I didn't give him full credit for his humanity, and I regret that.

I won't miss Whispers, and perhaps that's sad. He was a hard person for someone with my particular suite of imperfections to like very much, though I suppose better folks than I may have found him delightfully entertaining. And maybe more than that. Even if I won't miss him, I do appreciate him, both for his contribution to my perspective and also just for that man behind the mask whom I now know did indeed feel deeply, so deeply that he was ultimately moved to throw himself from the second story with a sheet tied around his neck.

Though I can't grieve his loss, I certainly grieve the tragic continuance of all the sickeningly unnecessary greed, cruelty, and cultivated weakness in all of us that led to it.

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tenzintenzin Posted 10 months ago. ✓ Mailed 10 months ago   Favorite
Hubert
As a regular reader, I’ve been reading William Goehlers blogs for years. I’ve never commented on any of them, or contacted him. But I’ve read them all. From the beginning of his time in jail. Through his struggles, anger, trying to come to terms with the time he had been given his frustrations. Then as he allowed himself to explore new avenues, new ideas, theories, religions, and even tread in areas he would never have explored in the outside he began his evolution. Evolution is a frightening prospect for people who don’t trust other people. He trusted only himself. And in jail, he found out who he was.
He posted many photos of himself and his children and loved ones. He was a handsome man, had some lovely kids. And he worshipped them. Spoke of them often. Must have thought about them endlessly. Jails one gift to a person, the ability to spend time alone in one’s own mind. A blessing and a curse.
Then came the replies to his blogs, lots of comments. His old friends found him through this incredible space, BTB. This conduit that allows people to reconnect without having to search through the prison maze to find old friends and family members. Maybe even making what would be an uncomfortable situation easier, anonymous sometimes, as people attempt to reconnect.
It was incredible to read of his reconnecting with his children over a period of almost 13 years via this blog. Sometimes I found myself having to stop reading them, I felt like I was intruding on his privacy.
BTB What an incredible gift to these children and this man.
He posted up all the courses he took, the meetings he attended and participated in.The changes he made Not the usual hoops inmates jump through to convince the parole board. He really applied himself to the notion of change, and more importantly trust, trust in other people.
Then there was a sea change.
And in the recent year and a half it began to look like he was actually going to be paroled prior to his release date. This was a REAL possibility.
Things were actually actively moving positively in that direction. As optimistically as two years.
And for William Goehler, he could see the finishing line in sight.
He literally posted a few weeks ago.
And today I learned he had taken his life. I learned it from you. In your ‘epitaph’. Hung himself from a balcony you said, after learning of the death of his son.

He couldn’t take another lungful of breath in a world that his son no longer inhabited. As a parent I understand that FULLY. I understand that soul destroying grief.

In the epitaph you cruelly and inappropriately included this barb directed at me. (“I wouldn’t be surprised if he and Tenzin were buddies here, as they certainly shared some troll tendencies.”)
Is this because I haven’t responded to your posts to me?
If I write you now, I will write something impulsive and mean, and I will regret it.

RIP William Goehler.
To his family and loved ones.
I wish you peace and much much love

Dymitri Haraszewski Posted 9 months, 1 week ago.   Favorite
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