When you are haunted you feel ill at ease, and nothing seems to ring the right bell. You are always aware of what is at your back, what has passed on, what should be gone from your mind. What follows you, follows you through the dimly lit alleyways of the everyday, through the murky corridors of human connection, is not a ghost. It is instead the overwhelming sense of not having lived your life the best way, of not giving your full measure of humility, of honesty, of love.
These past few years have haunted me. In earlier years I lived for the sublime, taking moments and collecting them in my mind and heart like photographs in an album. I lived for those highlights, but I also took an old man’s advice and tried to live always in the glow-lights, in the moments that veer away from the sublime and into the mundane, that may not capture the luminous quality of a sunset but instead give off the glow of a full moon on a night when it is most needed. In recent years I have not lived in anything, for anything. There is no real effort in anything I do, and when I fight it is for ground not worth standing on in the first place.
I am at this moment in a hotel suite overlooking the Cape Fear River. Several miles from here is a place where many years ago men built a large seawall to protect their military interests, and if you stand on that wall at high tide you may well be washed into the surging sea. The waves hit the wall, one after another, surging over it and into a multitude of barnacle-covered boulders only to fly backwards into the sea again. And so it goes. The sea gives, and then it takes away. It is like anything else in this life.
The waves in my life, waves that carry in their foam all that I have wanted in this life, needed in this life, they continue to crash into whatever strength is left in me. I can’t be sure but I feel that soon the time will come when those waves will have to return to the place they came from, and I will have to learn again how to give, to love, to no longer care about what I need but provide instead for the needs of others. My namesake, Saint Francis, is famous for having prayed, “Let me not seek to be understood but to understand,” and if I should truly need anything in this time, in this place I have found myself in, it is to make this prayer my own once again.
Perhaps in doing so I will find myself in another Franciscan story, as the barren tree that the little Saint implored to speak to him of God, which then bloomed large and colorful in the midst of the grey, haunted winter, perhaps I will find myself to be something growing and alive once again.
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Friday, October 31, 2008
2 Posts from the Not so Distant Past
August 3rd
In the end, this summer will not stand as one of the better seasons in my life. Situations have gone awry, trusts have been broken, and the days often dissolve into a sort of grey, seamless patchwork. The baser parts of myself have been interfering with my metaphysical goals. The harsh side of love is that it often involves not being loved in turn; that it requires giving with the full knowledge that nothing will be received. It is hard sometimes to feel unappreciated and alone, but it is far worse to let circumstances cause you to withhold your own love and care for others. Love has to be a one-way street before it can become anything else.Today I drove out to Indian Creek and put my swim-trunks on, locked my truck and walked down the pathway to the water. I absentmindedly took some photographs of the water and wished for some matches. The creek always seems a fitting place for any sort of reflection- after all it was in those waters that I made my first half-hearted attempt at better understanding myself, of living more mindfully in the world around me, of touching whatever rhythms exist beneath the rattle and shake of everyday living. I stepped into the frigid water, felt it wind around my ankles like a blanket. I thought of Rumi: "There’s no room for lack of trust, or trust. Nothing in this existence but that existence." I looked toward a cabin up on the hill that I had helped build, years ago. I tried skipping some stones but never made it past five jumps. Mostly I stood there in the creek, admiring the moving water and the sun’s valiant attempts to break through the dense canopy overhead.
"You need to return to certain places to see things as they are," I imagined the trees saying. I realized again that this is all a circle, some sort of cosmic raga tying us all together and tearing us apart again. What comes to you must go away- what goes away will someday return, though perhaps in another, unexpected form.
There was something alive in the air as I toweled off with my shirt and gathered my things. Looking back, I almost imagined I had left my sorrows somewhere behind me, lost in the turgid waters of the creek.
September 20th
The first winds of autumn are finally blowing in to settle our nerves and give us room to breathe. The last days of summer are thick and remorseless, and its hard to feel good about anything in their midst. This summer it was hard to feel good anyway, but that is all behind me now- or at least it’s all hundreds of miles away.
I am enjoying myself for the first time in a long time. I left my friends house tonight, took in the stars in the clear black sky, put on some Van Morrison in the truck and took the long way home. There are good people around if you know where to look. Sometimes I don’t believe it, but I have to keep repeating it like a mantra till it sticks.
These early fall winds, the last gasps of the summer just at their heels, feel charged with possibility, with the feeling that anything can happen. For once that doesn’t strike me as ominous- and for that, if nothing else, I am hopeful.
I am enjoying myself for the first time in a long time. I left my friends house tonight, took in the stars in the clear black sky, put on some Van Morrison in the truck and took the long way home. There are good people around if you know where to look. Sometimes I don’t believe it, but I have to keep repeating it like a mantra till it sticks.
These early fall winds, the last gasps of the summer just at their heels, feel charged with possibility, with the feeling that anything can happen. For once that doesn’t strike me as ominous- and for that, if nothing else, I am hopeful.
Monday, June 23, 2008
dreams, dreams to remember
Here in exile we wait for the news, any sort of news. There are a certain few of us who know full well the implications of abandonment; indeed we have come to expect it as our lot in life. For some this smacks of the earth shattering, but for those of us with shit to do it is merely background noise. It would be useless to pretend that anything surprises anymore. The unholy act of putting words to paper necessitates a sort of amused detachment, a way of saying to hell with it without sacrificing an inch. All we have to lose is self-respect.
I have dreams to remember too, but they aren’t the kind you sing about. Like Rimbaud I have grown sick of the world around me. It may be high time to light out for some distant backwater in hopes that the natives will be friendly, but somewhere in the back of my head it feels like a sort of betrayal. What hangs in the balance are the things that lie unsaid, that can never be said. I am only sick because I made myself that way. Not being honest with yourself is like sticking a finger down your throat, like throwing sand against the wind and expecting it to end up somewhere besides your own face.
I have dreams to remember too, but they aren’t the kind you sing about. Like Rimbaud I have grown sick of the world around me. It may be high time to light out for some distant backwater in hopes that the natives will be friendly, but somewhere in the back of my head it feels like a sort of betrayal. What hangs in the balance are the things that lie unsaid, that can never be said. I am only sick because I made myself that way. Not being honest with yourself is like sticking a finger down your throat, like throwing sand against the wind and expecting it to end up somewhere besides your own face.
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Stranded
It has been raining and spring is starting to roll in like a thundercloud. It obscures everything I do. Just when the molasses is thickest, the sun comes out. It’s just as well. I’ll be swimming in the river soon enough, and already I feel that it will be a sort of awakening. I’ll shed my skin in the green water just as surely as any snake. It’s calling to me like a dinner bell, and I might just be hungry enough to answer it the right way this time around. I look at the people that have been popping up lately and something tells me I ought to recognize all of this from something I may have seen before, or dreamed maybe.
But if life has taught me anything, it’s that everything is unpredictable except maybe the moon and the tides. Maybe even right and wrong aren’t so clear sometimes. I might just be in a place for a while where confusion is queen, where the unstruck note is the most important part of the whole orchestrated piece. I am planning on being okay with this, but I don’t expect anyone to follow me.
I put on my moccasins earlier tonight and went out for a while. The air still has a chill to it but there is an electric urgency to it as well. The spring always comes when it is most needed, like a storm traveling thousands of miles just to water some poor dirt farmer’s crops. I have been in the wrong place for far too long, and I am not speaking of geography. I think I will choose to see these April showers as a sort of benediction, gently urging me on my way to some distant place, some place that I have seen before but never quite reached.
But if life has taught me anything, it’s that everything is unpredictable except maybe the moon and the tides. Maybe even right and wrong aren’t so clear sometimes. I might just be in a place for a while where confusion is queen, where the unstruck note is the most important part of the whole orchestrated piece. I am planning on being okay with this, but I don’t expect anyone to follow me.
I put on my moccasins earlier tonight and went out for a while. The air still has a chill to it but there is an electric urgency to it as well. The spring always comes when it is most needed, like a storm traveling thousands of miles just to water some poor dirt farmer’s crops. I have been in the wrong place for far too long, and I am not speaking of geography. I think I will choose to see these April showers as a sort of benediction, gently urging me on my way to some distant place, some place that I have seen before but never quite reached.
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