Stepping back, I see the body in all its animal certainty, it’s imperative command. Biological, dirty, gorgeous. Fears and longing surging, coursing through electrons.
Stepping back, there is the mind in fluid rush, cutting new banks, plummeting from heights, leaping to conclusions. Prodding the body through survival.
Stepping back, consciousness rests, seeing all. Unjudging, edgeless, aware.
“The entire purpose of a clean and well-ordered life is to liberate you from the thralldom of chaos and the burden of sorrow. (…) What is wrong with a life which is free from problems? Personality is merely a reflection of the real. (…) Once you realize that the person is merely a shadow of the reality, but not reality itself, you cease to fret and worry. You agree to be guided from within and life becomes a journey into the unknown.”
Story telling is a pleasure, it is that simple for me, as long as I don’t let other things color it. For instance, I do not wish to see myself as your teacher, that is of course unless you will promise to be mine as well. It is not simple entertainment either; it is more like the out going breath after a moment of awe. Not all of my stories do as I wish, some bend or break in the making and I share them anyway, hoping the listener will see the wabisabi in them.
I remind myself, that to dance well, you must dance. So here is a story; rain after a dry patch.
The Manifester’s Dilemma
I have always been a capable manifester. Hey, that’s how I got the gig as a Bard. I can imagine darn near anything, and that is over 50% of any story or song. I was never intentionally careless about the results either, I made sure to get to know my audience and what it was they needed to change in their world, before any performance. But it’s not the sort of thing that you can really control. Manifesting, really good manifesting, comes of its own accord, and even the best of intentions aren’t powerful enough to prevent the roll of creative energy, when it gets going.
By now, I bet, you’ve figured out what the problem is here. There is no way that I can ever settle down. Sometimes I need to get going fast, before the sun comes up, before I see what the results have been. They will know, the people who heard me speaking, singing, playing, flinging a story sky high. They will know. They will blame me, and rightly so. I am the cause.
The reason this is true, is that I am weak. I want so badly to be a part of their world, to stay for a while, to be accepted and loved for my creations, for myself. I will meet with a few of them and hit it off. The mothers and shop keepers, the kids and grandparents, the old crones and gaffers, and occasionally there will be a special someone who smiles so beautifully that it makes your heart ache. It makes me long for the things that I sing about, for the things that I make true just for them.
Right there is the hitch. You can’t really manifest your own world. If you did, well, you would go around being some sort of demi-god and greed would be your amulet. No matter how determined you might be to be the good guy, most humans (and I definitely fall into the ‘ordinary’ category) slip right into greed when they have too much power. You’ve heard the saying ‘drunk on power’? This is where it comes from. Imagine someone, kind of like me, who can make things come out just the way they want them, out of nowhere, and being able to say “l’ll just have the one, thanks…”. It is not going to happen.
Manifesting though, that happens. It just pours out of me when I least expect it. It is not at all like the performances that I plan, the ones where I am thinking about how these people in the pub, in this little village, will be drawn together and see a common cause, or find a deep need to care for their elderly, or teach music to their children, or anything highly useful and remarkably prosaic, like that. What does happen, is I will get an audience that I really like, one who seems to get who I am and gives me the impression that they honor me. They get generous and friendly, buying me a few too many, wanting me to try some concoction that only this place sells: “we’re famous for it”! The evening gets on and only a few of us are left around the fire and someone asks for something special. They want a ghost story, or a warrior’s tale, something with a witch and a beautiful woman, and I am doomed.
You imagine that I should be able to stop myself, to hold back and put them off, but that is not how it works. I am not the creator; I am a conduit. Otherwise I would have a big house on the hill and six fat babies and a cow and someone else to milk it. Instead, before I can remember all the other times, it starts. I open and the story just rolls out into the air, clear and new and vulnerable and intensely dangerous. Sometimes I sing and play, sometimes I whisper and shout, but I have no way to stop it. I wish I did.
The last time was just six months ago. I was in a place very like the one I am in now, with a small valley, leading up to a more mountainous area. Plenty of grazing, a built-up place that does trading with the cities that are closest, it had a school with two teachers, and a hat shop. It’s the hat shop that really makes it, I think. An ordinary little village makes its head gear at home; they knit and sew and felt out all the pretty utilitarian things a community might wear for themselves, but a place that has made the next level has a real milliner all its own. I made the mistake of going into that shop and ended up talking with the guy who owned it for several hours. I will never be able to forgive myself.
I sang songs of love that night. I don’t usually do that right away, but the place smelled of springtime and was full to bursting with courting couples. The milliner appeared to be on his own. He was a widower of two years, I was told by the bartender, and you might expect that he would be ready to find someone to be with, but he was alone. I was so caught up in the mood that I had set, that when he asked me to tell a romantic ghost story, I fell right in to it.
I smiled and took a slow sip of my wine, heady, not sweet but remarkably fragrant. The lights lowered by themselves, blowing out with the opening of a door, or guttering in their own wax. The fire flared. All they could see was my face, caught by the flickering flames beside me.
“There was once a man who lived in a small village. He considered himself to be remarkably fortunate, for he had found a profession selling cloth.”
(Close, but not too close, there is a trick to including listeners in their own stories).
“It pleased him, because his character was such that he loved to trade and sell; he was a friendly, chatty, sort. Because he was also fair and diligent, his reputation was good and he became a success, both in his own village and the surrounding ones as well. This allowed him to grow in the esteem of all who knew him, so when the prettiest, brightest, and feistiest young woman in the countryside went looking for a husband, she came looking for him. His name was Rath and hers was Reeta. They seemed made for each other.”
(You don’t look worried, and you are right, these stories can only be told once, with consequences. After that they are only the husks of stories: beautifully scented, but empty.)
“Being individuals of romantic nature, they spent the days of their courtship walking the paths and ranging in the hills of their valley and resting under trees. In short, they spent their time doing what lovers have always done: nothing and everything without the slightest complaint or expectation. Each day brought them closer and they discovered just how similar and how different they were.”
“Both of them were bright and curious about every little thing. They spoke of their neighbors’ lives, the workings of a caterpillar that spun his cocoon, the flavor of cheeses and of the sweet tips of grass pulled along the way. Where they differed was less obvious, Rath was very driven to work hard, as was Reeta, but she displayed, over and over a turn toward adventure, a way to expend her vast energy, that he did not understand. As simple as a race up a hill or leaning well out on a limb for the ripest fruit, Reeta put the tiniest bit of thrill in, wherever she could. When she found out that Rath held back from these things, she began to implore and then to pull him into her world. Mostly he only smiled at what he thought she would outgrow in time, but sometimes he let her have her way, and bemused, follow her on some inexplicable route to a cave or (in only the warmest of weather) out into the river to tred the rocky island there.”
“Eventually, but not before the years end, they were married. Rath may have expected Reeta’s vibrant wildness to fade after they began a family, but that was not to be. A year went by, then two more and no child was born. The baby things that her mother had given her were put away, but Reeta danced all the more, laughed, and ran as if nothing should stop her. Rath agreed in his heart, but he also knew this person, his sweet friend, and he worried. He worried that she danced a bit wildly, laughed a fraction too loudly, and ran with such abandon that he wished to simply reach out and sooth her. If only he could catch up.”
“It was on a Sunday ramble, a picnic carried up to the highest view of their village, that she fell. Just out of his reach, she stood and followed a butterfly, leaping as it fluttered up. When Rath saw the direction of her leaps, growing wilder and more energetic as the butterfly rose higher and higher, he called out. He jumped up and shouted as he ran. In the high grass the edges of the cliff were hidden.”
You can see how this was going; the solitude, deep sorrow, the ghost who renders his soul whole again. His playful lover returned to him for all time, so that his neighbors thought him mad. I did that to him, a lonely man who might have had a life, a future, a family if he had not had the bad fortune to meet me. I did it because of this ‘gift’, this ‘thing’ that uses me as its brush, its mallet. That is why I cannot stay.
He came and found me, after only a few days, nearly 30 miles away. I thought that he was going to kill me and I hardly felt anything about it. It would mean I could finally quit and find my own peace. He thanked me! He told me that he had never been happier, now that they would be together always. I felt like throwing up, but I took his hand and wished him well.
That is why I will be homeless until I die. I can’t make this my home, or you my lover. No. But I agree, if you come with me, the way you sing, the way you play that lute, the way you kiss, we might have half a chance.
On any given day I may narrow my perceptions or slide right past the horizon. Today began with a floating island, and will end with a fire mountain. I am ready. Feel free to join me.
Fire
Experiences arrive and pass away. My senses detect them and my mind defines them. Nothing is concrete: without the senses, would anything have happened? I can not know.
What I allow opens the possibility. Why be narrow? Take a chance and float.
Have you ever tried to slide into the heaven of sensation and met
You know not what resistance but it held you back? have you ever turned on your shoulder
helplessly, facing the white moon, crying let me in? have you dared to count the months as they pass and the years
while you imagined pleasure, shining like honey, locked in some secret tree? have you dared to feel the isolation gathering
intolerably and recognized what kinds of explosions can follow from an intolerable condition? have you walked out in the mornings
wherever you are in the world to consider all those gleaming and reasonless lives that flow outward, and outward, easily, to the last moment the bulbs of their lungs
their bones and their appetites can carry them? oh, have you looked wistfully into the flushed bodies of the flowers? have you stood
staring out over the swamps, the swelling rivers where the birds, like tossing fires flash through the trees, their bodies exchanging a certain happiness
in the sleek, amazing humdrum of natures design- blood's heaven, spirit's haven to which you can not belong?
Crossed path.
Some recent springtime ago, I was camping on the edge of a desert, where the remnants of a different ecosystem had survived due to a valiant spring, forming a pool.
Here, the Night Hawk preformed his display of arching spins and dives which caused his feathers to whistle. It was mesmerizing. It was joyful to watch as twilight fell.
Words are so useless in conveying experiences. I can only supply you with a suggestion, which your own experience will dictate in the end.
In the same way, Mary Oliver has chosen words that may or may not remind you of sometime in your life. Maybe it is a time you will wish to turn from anyway, to forget rather than gouge up the unfiltered emotion for.
We human-kind prefer to feel pleasure, that is how we are made. We seek life, pleasure, and continuance over it’s opposite. So here is the possible purpose of poetry, of fairy tales, and even science fiction; it provides the shield from what is here and disturbing, while allowing us to still see.
For the last few weeks I have been reading:
“The World Without Us” by Alan Weisman.
I can only read it in small segments, as I have a very active imagination, which I try to protect for the sake of sleep. His premise, revealed in an interview some years ago, was that he could discuss very difficult environmental issues, and not lose the attention of his audience, by placing his discussion in a world where mankind no longer lives. We have been erased, no reason given. Why are we more comfortable with this than, say, the many dystopian stories where we struggle to survive, or the very useful factual, scientific articles? Hmmm.
He begins the book with a quote, (in german and in english) from the Chinese poet Li Tai Po, “The Chinese Flute: Drinking Song of the Sorrow of the Earth”.
Das Firmament blaut ewig, und die Erde Wird longe fest steh'n und aufblüh'n im Lenz. Du aber, Mensch, wie lange lebst denn du?
The firmament is blue forever, and the Earth Will long stand firm and bloom in spring. But, man, how long will you live?
This begins his book with the reminder, that in earth’s own history, many have come and many departed. For some reason, the concept goes down easier with a poem.
Chapter one is located in the Polish primeval forest (Bialowieza Puszcza). A place of huge and nearly unsullied trees. For now. Mr. Weisman describes the changing laws that will eventually destroy this last wilderness, like all the rest.
Throughout the remainder of the book, we get to see what will happen to all our productions, our creations, the bones and poisons of our civilization. Given enough time, the world recovers from us, and given enough distance we can all discuss it.
Have you ever walked in a forest and known that your very foot steps heralded its end?
Could you hear it listening to you, to your foot strike, your breath, and knew it would embrace you with love to the bitter end?
Have you ever wandered a forest and felt the beat of only the one heart? Let's go for a walk, shall we?
We, this people, on a small and lonely planet Traveling through casual space Past aloof stars, across the way of indifferent suns To a destination where all signs tell us It is possible and imperative that we learn A brave and startling truth
And when we come to it To the day of peacemaking When we release our fingers From fists of hostility And allow the pure air to cool our palms
When we come to it When the curtain falls on the minstrel show of hate And faces sooted with scorn and scrubbed clean When battlefields and coliseum No longer rake our unique and particular sons and daughters Up with the bruised and bloody grass To lie in identical plots in foreign soil
When the rapacious storming of the churches The screaming racket in the temples have ceased When the pennants are waving gaily When the banners of the world tremble Stoutly in the good, clean breeze
When we come to it When we let the rifles fall from our shoulders And children dress their dolls in flags of truce When land mines of death have been removed And the aged can walk into evenings of peace When religious ritual is not perfumed By the incense of burning flesh And childhood dreams are not kicked awake By nightmares of abuse
When we come to it Then we will confess that not the Pyramids With their stones set in mysterious perfection Nor the Gardens of Babylon Hanging as eternal beauty In our collective memory Not the Grand Canyon Kindled into delicious color By Western sunsets
Nor the Danube, flowing its blue soul into Europe Not the sacred peak of Mount Fuji Stretching to the Rising Sun Neither Father Amazon nor Mother Mississippi who, without favor, Nurture all creatures in the depths and on the shores These are not the only wonders of the world
When we come to it We, this people, on this minuscule and kithless globe Who reach daily for the bomb, the blade and the dagger Yet who petition in the dark for tokens of peace We, this people on this mote of matter In whose mouths abide cankerous words Which challenge our very existence Yet out of those same mouths Come songs of such exquisite sweetness That the heart falters in its labor And the body is quieted into awe
We, this people, on this small and drifting planet Whose hands can strike with such abandon That in a twinkling, life is sapped from the living Yet those same hands can touch with such healing, irresistible tenderness That the haughty neck is happy to bow And the proud back is glad to bend Out of such chaos, of such contradiction We learn that we are neither devils nor divines
When we come to it We, this people, on this wayward, floating body Created on this earth, of this earth Have the power to fashion for this earth A climate where every man and every woman Can live freely without sanctimonious piety Without crippling fear
When we come to it We must confess that we are the possible We are the miraculous, the true wonder of this world That is when, and only when We come to it.
Maya Angelou (1928-2014) was an American poet, singer, memoirist, and civil rights activist.