After fathering three sons, after becoming single, after buying a Mexican jackfruit farm with a high school friend, after leaving the world of promoting and producing live music, after leaving jobs in construction, environmental politics and with a startup airline, and after surviving neck cancer surgery, Francis Kohler '22 enrolled at 91视频.
鈥淐ollege has been wonderfully therapeutic for me,鈥� said Kohler in a 2021 Zoom interview, where he was wearing a Hawaiian shirt and a crocheted hat over his long gray locks. He spoke from the woodshop in Tabitha Brown Hall, where he is taking a pottery class.
Kohler was, at the time, surely the only Pacific undergraduate who鈥檚 eligible for Social Security, lost his job for honoring a picket line during the Reagan administration, had a son born in Mexico, and produced the last live show that featured Billy Rancher. (Google him.) He was, in academic terms, a senior, majoring in creative writing. And enjoying himself immensely.
He enjoyed being a student so much, in fact, that he expected to continue to take college courses even after graduating.
鈥淚鈥檒l probably audit classes for the rest of my life,鈥� he said.
In a setting where most student stories focus on high school sports stars or interesting internships, it鈥檚 hard to know where to begin with Francis Kohler. But what鈥檚 clear is that he adds a spark of lived experience to the classroom and to campus life.
鈥淔rancis brings a wealth of life experience to our campus and an openness to collaborating with his younger peers,鈥� Keya Mitra, Kohler鈥檚 adviser and director of creative writing said in an email. 鈥淗e works tirelessly on his creative work, demonstrating tremendous dedication to his classes and writing projects. I appreciate his passion for learning.鈥�
At the age of 68, Kohler has learned a few things that many of his classmates haven鈥檛, including:
- Mexico is cool. It鈥檚 a place where Kohler drove a Volkswagen bus, was encouraged by a wise Mexican man to become a father for the first time, (and where his third son was born) bought and operated a farm, and ate a lot of fish soup. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a slice of heaven,鈥� he said.
- Owning nightclubs and promoting music is fun, demanding work. 鈥淚 promoted more than a thousand acts.鈥�
- Working in the construction business is unfulfilling. Kohler took a job in construction at the urging of his former wife. It paid well, but was personally unrewarding. He quit.
- It鈥檚 better to keep your principles than a paycheck. Kohler loved working at Air Oregon, a long-defunct regional airline, but he honored the 1981 strike by the unionized air traffic controllers employed by the FAA. Then-President Ronald Reagan fired them and ordered replacements hired, so Kohler鈥檚 career in the aviation business was over.
- A neck cancer surgery scar is a great conversation starter. 鈥淚 tell people I got bitten by a shark,鈥� he said. He is cancer free today.
Kohler was taking a class at Portland Community College when he ran into Mike Shingle, then Pacific鈥檚 Academic and Career Advising director. Shingle suggested that Kohler could enroll at Pacific and earn a bachelor鈥檚 degree. With the help of scholarships and grants, Kohler found he could afford it. And so here he is, part of Pacific鈥檚 Class of 2022.
鈥淒uring the first few advising meetings, it became increasingly clear that Fran would succeed at Pacific 鈥� not only because of his strong academic background 鈥� but also because of his personality and demeanor,鈥� said Shingle in an email. 鈥淔ran is genuine, kind, funny, curious, and super creative.鈥�
When Kohler first meets a fellow student, they usually assume he鈥檚 a professor. When they ask what he teaches, he said, he tells them 鈥淒ynamic Uncertainty.鈥�
Kohler credits his three sons, Francis, Thomas and Carter, with encouraging his forays into writing and art. 鈥淭hey inspired me to pursue some of the things that I have,鈥� he said.
鈥淚 don't think my dad ever needed any encouragement to become a college student 鈥� if anything, he has been an inspiration and motivation to us in our own academics,鈥� Francis, Francis Kohler鈥檚 eldest son and himself a student at Portland State University, said in an email. 鈥淗e's always been an advocate for learning new skills and educational fulfillment, which I think is reflected entirely in his own decision to return to school at 68 years of age.鈥�
Added Carter, his youngest son, 鈥渉e's a little worn down and has some scars from a lifetime of hardships, but he doesn't let that stop him from taking advantage of opportunities.鈥�
His father, Carter Kohler said, is 鈥渟omeone who doesn't let age or wrinkles hold them back from great achievements.鈥�
Francis Kohler, the Pacific student, said he is, in many respects, self-educated. His curiosity, his varied careers, his array of coursework at Pacific, Portland Community College, and 50 years ago, at a carpentry college in Ohio, have taught him a great deal about what it means to be human in 21st (and 20th) century America, not to mention being an undergraduate at Pacific.
Engaging with students at Pacific, he said, has been 鈥渆xtremely rewarding.鈥�
鈥淚鈥檝e been able to provide a perspective that students they wouldn鈥檛 have any other way,鈥� Kohler said. 鈥淎nd they are been able to provide me perspective that is very complementary to the perspective I get from my children, who are the same age.鈥�
He said he鈥檚 enjoying writing a new chapter of his colorful life.
As Carter Kohler puts it: 鈥淪eek wonder and never grow up!鈥�