The sky’s on the move again, he can feel it. Mute, significant dramas of cloud in the late summer — huge manifestations, each one different, churned by its own bucking thermals and pockets of glare.“This has just been the lengthiest skein of towering cumulus clouds,” says Jack. “In 30 years of almost excessive sky watching, I’ve never seen anything like it.”
And as to his mission, his vocation, there have been the usual celestial hints. Drifting serendipities. Prods of light, directing him.
“That’s the way it’s always worked with this thing,” he says. “Sometimes it’s like going up a glass mountain in Vaseline shoes. But there are connections, things falling into place, constantly. And then you have to follow them.”
There’s the organization — For Spacious Skies, a culturally mobile philosophical/meteorological think tank dedicated to the promotion of “sky awareness” — and then there’s the man: Jack Borden. And at this point, three decades into the story, there’s really no telling them apart. Who hasn’t Jack talked to, lectured, belabored, over the years, in his stop-start jazzy/professional cadences? Who hasn’t he laid his sky trip on? Educators, aviators, politicians, weathermen, mental-health professionals, prison administrators, conservationists; TV, radio, print . . . he’s crisscrossed the continent, pitching for the heavens, puffing his cloud patter. And the message? It’s really very simple.
“There are benefits — moral and aesthetic and educational benefits — to be derived from just being aware of what’s going on over your head.” Borden’s slogan Number One: “No kid who appreciates the beauty of the sky is ever going to mug a Cumberland Farms cashier!”
Jack, at 80, is avid, dogmatic, wry, ebullient, tireless. At 50, he must have been formidable; at 30, a maniac. His conversation is fast-moving and tangential. He has crystalline recall. We pass six overheated and talk-filled hours as interviewer and subject, in the course of which I fortify myself with (tallying it all up) a PowerBar, a mug of tea, a bottle of water, a swordfish steak, a Caesar salad, a Heineken, and two French rolls. Jack’s total intake: a cup of coffee and a root beer.
The man whose head expanded
From 1959 to 1980, Jack worked as a newsman for WBZ-TV. He was well-known. He stomped around, microphone in hand. He covered Kerouac’s funeral in lugubrious Lowell: “I found this Bohemian hunched over the curb with his copy of On the Road, so I asked him if he wanted to express his feelings about Jack [Kerouac] to the camera. He told me to fuck off.”
Jack interviewed the parents of soldiers killed in Vietnam. He was approached by Professor Walter Houston Clark — “a neat guy, a baseball fan like myself” — and offered a place in an upcoming LSD trial. He said yes, and found himself psychedelicized at a millionaire's house in New Hampshire. “It was the snow melting on Mt. Monadnock, the sound of streams, of water running off the roof. . . . It was a stirring aesthetic experience. My first and last trip.”