We should take some acid and go to the Presidio and roll around. I have no science to corroborate this, but I’m pretty sure I can do drugs without hurting my body.
Month: September 2018
Meditation saved my life
Sometimes I get all caught up and drugged out and so deep into my art that I can’t see back out. I start to break all my good habits and hurtle headlong into the furnace. This is where meditation has saved my life. I stop and remember to breathe and return to my true nature and everything is alright. I breathe in everything and let out everything and remind myself that I’m not supposed to hold any of it. I’m just a part of the whole flow. All that matters is I do my best and respect and love others.
Creative flood
After I finish a creative flood and get a lot down on paper, I like get drunk to kill all my old thoughts and brain cells and start rebuilding new ones. Probably not healthy but definitely helpful for my art—this is a larger them I’ve noticed: art is often not healthy.
It includes everything over and beyond what is allowed by our survival, everything over and beyond our physical bodies in space and time, on the far side past the veil of death.
Love like
In some ways like attracts like. But as far as who you’ll love wouldn’t it be better that they mostly be different? If they were the same as you then you might as well love yourself. But then if they’re different than you do they really understand you?
My worst enemy and toughest critic
It’s only me that stops myself. It’s only me that tells myself that I can’t keep going, that I’m unhappy. It’s only my mind playing tricks on itself. I’m smarter than my biology. I should start acting like it.
Brain damage
I’ve been destroying my body over the past couple days. It’s just a phase. I drink and smoke and get punched in the face, trying to empty my brain of all the old cells to make room for new ones.
Wonder world
Woah it’s like a wonder world where the edges melt and all the exacticity of a normal woken up walk along isn’t so straight and narrow with no room to even barely breathe, no, not like that. Here is what we need and what we were meant to have until the order that was meant to give frame for the beauty ended up corrupting what it was supposed to protected by rounding its soft corners into edges for the advancement of a mission that we thought was in line with our needs but really just served to trade short-term pleasures for an eternal happiness that we were meant to have all along.
Forgot to relent
When it really doesn’t want to be that way, so much I push off and forgot to relent even when my sanity is shouting no. At the margins of what keeps me together even though I want to fall apart all the time; it has to be in the right way where I beak open into everything else and not just out into a non-discernible oblivion.
Who to call on
It’s a bunch of thoughts fighting for my attention. They all collide heads and explode and nobody wins. So I end up thinking of nothing all the time, until you ask me and I don’t know what to say. Like a classroom when all the students raise their hand at once and the teacher doesn’t know who to call on.
I’m really just a sieve
This afternoon I ate a cashew like I was a prisoner in a cell and it was the only food I had. The things you notice with such focus! I turned a page in my journal that was full of reminders, little poems, to-do lists, and notes to myself. I turned to a blank page and felt a sense of freedom.
Not only the page but everything is blank and brand new like all I’ve written here is all I’ve got—which is nothing. My memory is terrible lately and I’m a little worried but really I think it’s healthy not to have so much stored up in my mind all the time. Even that journal page full of reminders and lists was starting to stress me out.
I’m really just a sieve. My only function is to have things flow through me. And when I’ve caught too many big rocks, I need to be turned over and dumped out.
New motivations
Go until you can’t go anymore. Don’t think about what you’ll do when you get there; new motivations will push you even farther.
Killer god
Sometimes I get sick for a week and I imagine it’s going to be the end soon. I get irrational anxiety about having brain cancer or some disease. Then miraculously the next week I’ll be healthy again. I tell myself that God was about to off me but then he decided I’m not really done yet and I still have work to do. I’m doing everything to find out what that work is. But if I knew what it was I’m not sure I’d actually do it, even if I could. Because I want to stay alive. If god found out I was holding out on him he’d probably kill me anyway.
Good feels good
We arbitrarily choose good because it feels good. We’d choose bad if it felt good; some do. Then we realize our definitions of good and bad are all screwed up.
Such steel
In a city full of people, such steel so straight up to support an industrial flow of life above on the streets and in the buildings where bodies come in contact all day and some stay supple and human while others become like the steel and a part of the foundation; even for these I am thankful. For in one way they have forfeited their humanity. In another, they have made a great sacrifice for those of us who choose to remain human. Without the steel, those of us truly human would work up our appetites until we eat each other. The economic Apollonian steel offers the skeleton and checks and balances for the all the emotion and passion of the overwhelming Dionysian human.
Much further
Looking back at where I was to where I am now makes me believe in really how far we can progress; even with all my stumbles and detours I’m so much further now than before.
Straight into heaven
It’s nothing except for what it is right there in front of your face no tomfoolery or window dressings just an open door straight into heaven so good it kills you.
Locked out of the world
When there’s a certain world that you don’t get to be part of anymore. You get locked out, like going to prison or being stranded on an island. And you try to recreate everything in terms of what you knew before. But it’s not the same and you’re not sure if you want to even go on living anymore. You wish you could have your old world back or no world at all.
Freckle stars
I try to memorize her freckles like a sky of stars so when I’m not with her I can close me eyes and place the constellations —two on the upper inside of her left breast, one also on the inside but slightly higher on her right, and a trio in the center of her collarbone; like they were placed there by design.
Was a winter
So sober was a winter want of deluge and decay over off and oblong waffs so cigarette smoke’nt breathe. Behind closed doors and smoggy pours my good girl braids her hair.
Poetry on my iPhone
I write poetry on my iPhone and everything is great; I wait for a time when it won’t be when I won’t be as creative and in love when the same lights will seem darker and the same routine won’t be as happily productive. I try to breathe deep and drink it in now; God, the sunlight looks good coming in through the window and reflecting off the walls and my tanned skin. It’s because everything has made upward progress, I think; not so much up and down over time more up and up and up lately.
Piece of pie
Some of the time a small slice of pie is enough. Some of the time the whole pie isn’t enough.
More time
I want more time, what for? When I think of the rest of my life, I wonder what else there is. What would I miss if I didn’t get to live it? Isn’t it all pretty much the same?
If I were able to live for a millennia, I think I would. Why not? Might get some kicks out of it. But if I were able to choose immortality, I don’t know. Part of me wants to die, I think. But when I find newness that gives me life, I fear death.
If I could always find newness, maybe I would choose eternal life. But then what if I changed my mind? I’d be doomed not to die. Even if that were the case, I think I’d find something new and be alright.
Eat fast enough
I try to make it last eating slow and taking my time but then my food gets cold and I realize you just have to take it as it comes all you can change is the depth of your focus.
A hat
A hat is a halfway open opportunity to cover up upside down or fill up right side up a head of brains or a bucket of rain a top for a party or a little garden.
Chicken noodle soup
Holy half a bowl of soup chicken noodle doopdy doop warmthy well and woken up thank God I have some in my cup.
I miss Kansas
Walking ways where no trails tread early up and off to bed so long as the dream doe dances man oh man God I miss Kansas.
Rainy sunday morning
When the window talks and the raindrops knock curled up under covers wearing my brother’s socks the sheets are made of silk —not really; they’re cotton, I think— but they might as well be silk and everything else that’s perfect because that’s how everything feels on a rainy Sunday morning like this.
Come in everyone
When I stare into the black backs of my eyelids, my heart and soul open up for other identities to pour in. I think and see and feel other people and live their lives for quick successive snapshots. People I don’t know or at least can’t remember or maybe my former selves. My ego opens up wider as my physical body is still the same and even my mental remembers mostly the memories that belong to my body but my soul that has a larger grasp opens up to a broader swath of the Self and let’s everyone else in.
in my eyes in my mirror are my selves
In my eyes in my mirror are my selves.
Wonder who I was
When it wasn’t what was wanted by the violent crowd my knees began to tremble and wonder who I was. For if not love does garner, what I wish to say, where my words fall on fertile ears, an alien home I do not know.
Sickle topple lophagus
Sickle topple lophagus let it swallow loud sopple so that words can sing from my tired mouth. Windows washing waffle woes whence where theirs have worn there rips rife like twilight nights what queer clowns waved asorn.
Nonstop poetry
Poems have filled my head ever since my trip by the river with Ford. Like all the words in the world were held in a jar and that jar were turned upside down into my sleeping mind, so I wake up in the middle of the night with all this out-of-order nonsense that I can’t help but think sounds important so I have to get out of bed and write it down.
This is the third night this has happened. I hope it doesn’t stop for another week or so, until the whole jar is emptied, even though my mind spills over already and what’s in my mind tonight displaces what was there the night before. I like to have this non-stagnant flow. It gives me a sense of freedom and creation.
Come on change
I wanted to wait and watch and see what would change. I’d hoped that more would’ve by now.
A quarter stomach heart
I engaged a quarter of my stomach and cut off the part of my heart that didn’t fit into just strictly my bare minimum need to survive.
Seldom deep
I’ve seldom time to look deep down. I’ve cared about what I can.
Loved again
I stepped low and let the bass in my feet rumble. I looked into a like face and loved again. I wanted what was taken for the last time. I’ve cared about my queen as I could.
Moreness
Sometimes I think to myself, what if this is it? Then I’m hit with such a gust of moreness that first I try to catch my breath and second I feel foolish for thinking before that there might be nothing more.
Starting with the physical
I try not to think of it and reconstruct it in my own mental. I used to do this, reading and rearranging according to what I thought would be optimal. Performing my own mental surgery to rewire my brain.
Lately I try to let all that happen naturally in the physical. What my body takes in: what it eats, touches, hears, sees; how it breathes, exercises, works plays; who it loves and fights; where it spends its time in nature and the city. All these exposures subject my mind to certain natural rewirings via the physical inputs of my body in space and time.
If you believe that reality was created this way for a reason, and our hearts and souls were put here for a reason, it is not far off to believe that if you do the right things starting with the physical, then all the intended effects will flow up through the mental and to the spiritual.
Just by breathing and watching, so much can be done, even more than by a mathematician who tries to work out all the figures on his whiteboard or a guru who tries to memorize the spiritual texts. All that is higher is there in the base physical, too, ready to be absorbed by simple bodily actions.
It is when I remember, imagine, or hope that I am putting ideas into my mind that break the connection between my body and mind in the present physical reality. Ideally, always, I am thinking of what my body is presently experiencing so that I can listen to the story that the physical world is trying to tell me, without trying to piece together my own story from the confused fragments in my mind. A full cohesive and linear story is written into a lifetime in the physical world.
Dream writings
In the middle of the night, I can’t control my intellect. Healthier, I’ve found, just to follow along where my dreams and subconscious ideas have gone on their own throughout the sleeping night, like a child with my hand held by my parent, I don’t tantrum or run in another direction.
Often what is there is already there so that when I wake up in the middle of the night and start to write something exactly like this, all I’ve to do is start with the first words in my mind and the rest come tumbling out after due to no extra effort of my own. It’s all from what’s been done in my subconscious between 10pm and 4:30am.
Whereas the weirdest part, irksome even for a writer that tries to get down what’s good, is just how much I don’t recall upon waking, how many dreams I don’t remember but lived like my real waking life nonetheless. These forgotten dreams affect me surely but I do not know them firsthand. All I can do is write what there is and go back to sleep and wait for my parent to wake me again with her wisdom.
More will come
Don’t carry it all on your shoulders, welcome the world into you. Let the earth and wind be your strength, books and sages your mind, children and lovers your heart, stars and mushrooms your soul, beauty your eyes, fir trees your feel, stories your memory.
Let it all grow and change outside of yourself. Hold only what is given to you, only long enough to give it away. You are a sieve that must occasionally be turned upside down and emptied even of what you’ve caught. Let everything else flow through and do not long for it to come again. More will come.
Moon minds ponder
Spending time with a wasting whine that waxes off not on; until there clears some subtle fear that what was wasn’t there. Only then where compass spins and map men know no longer, does truth reveal what hearts can't feel and only moon minds ponder.
Lily pad revolution
When you don’t really know what you want to say about dragging out a paramount, keep it consistent and nag a lake for the fishes on bottom to bubble up a complaint that makes enough sense to rally the lily pads against the dam.
After the trip
After the trip, everything is refreshed and new. I pick up objects that feel like I’ve never felt before even though it’s the oatmeal container that I’ve grabbed every morning for a year. Even my job is exciting and rewarding in ways that I’ve forgotten. Just the ability to speak and interact with such beautiful people, I’m so thankful for.
A certain light danced
It seemed that we weren’t really going anywhere except for what was moving all around us such that a certain light danced in between the cracks in space that we were constantly falling into, laughing all the way.
A special few
It felt to me like we were on a trajectory that started and ended with confusion and chaos no matter how many times the sun rose consistently in the morning and the river flowed the same direction, the order in the universe still wasn’t enough to sustain a sense of meaning that we could wrap our heads around and get on living in the same direction of hope for a future that wouldn’t let us down like all the times when we thought we had something but it turned out to be proven wrong by science or just simply forgotten so that where we’ve ended up is a group of individuals trying to figure out for themselves and I can’t help but think there are a special few who are getting close.
Too high
I dose myself up too high so that I have to try my best to stretch out my shirt and make a parachute on the way back down.
Talking stool
Well thank God you’re here because the stool just wouldn’t take no for an answer and if I had to sit down then I might as well have a conversation and the stool wasn’t telling me anything other than “sit down, sit down” over and over. Even when I prodded I only heard a little about the wood he was made of and that was it so after that I really needed a human conversation.
Away from here
Went a while away from here just to see what I couldn’t before, so mucked up with soot in my eyes and the chimney unswept so that all the once new cheer of a morning fire got bogged down in normalcy like a leftover icy night.
Glass sand
Little did I know that the walk wouldn’t be so long if the glass hadn’t shattered all over the desert sand so that you couldn’t step anywhere barefoot without knowing what might cut you, so floating down the river was our only choice.
Mind travel
The whole travel home I feel like my body knew the way and carried itself while my mind traveled elsewhere—home with other travelers leaving the airport, into empty crumpled snack bags on the plane, in the silence in between jet engines, hoping there was water still in my cup. Now I’m home and wonder how I got here, my body sitting on my bed that it missed and my mind in so many other places.
Window flowers
So it’s like there was a time when it couldn’t be said in so many words even though that wasn’t what you wanted to think about the flowers that grew outside your window despite the lack of sun. Grow they did and learned to talk in ways the sun never taught them, supposedly from what they saw inside the window.
Another body
I saw another hand holding a phone in the car window; I thought it was mine. My ego dissolution remains, like my mind could use another body just the same.
On his phone, he’s reading something. I read sometimes too. Maybe it is me, I’m not sure.
Driving down the road
Waxed wheels on lighted asphalt just waiting to rip a tread in the dashed lines off to a point in the dark pinched distance where other racers wait saying, “Come on, catch up.”
Grip the steering wheel, but not too tight. You can’t let them know you’re trying. Lean back and careen into the dark night.
New billboards
Advertising billboards and nightlight street signs. A return to the city and all the buildings that look like new. A shower and a clean return to routine. Slipping back into what I’ve done to figure out what I haven’t still, then I’ll take a car back to the airport again and the billboards will say something new.
Leaving slack
Sometimes I try to plan things too perfectly and don’t leave margins for air and the whole thing breaks when one small thing goes wrong. It’s important to leave yourself slack and enjoy it when everything does go as planned and you have to have some patience to wait for the slack to let out and remind yourself that you would have been thankful if you needed it.
Regal remedies
Sneaky regal remedies for slum-born sickness hoping it will go away if the shacks and lean-tos are far enough from the palace. It’s a forgotten thing about kings and queens that they forgot themselves that you and I and prying eyes will seed a thought of destruction.
No more bedtime stories
Whimper whistle wash simple supply squash midnight raves and lunes mutter mistletunes so that the kids can’t say when parents went away and bedtime stories stopped.
Fewer marble jars
Epic animal sights after four beer flights seeing eyes their whites crying flies and mites only simple slow powder soft as snow and I would say there are fewer marble jars.
All-prevailing one good
Suppose it weren’t a sort of trick they played and all was meant to help you where what seemed so terrible in the moment would turn out good if you’d let it but you’re so focused on seeing things as two that are really only one and that one is good just for the sake of being a teacup tootsie in the dark dreary space that conspired but failed to keep out the all-prevailing one good that grew from deep inside it in the beginning.
Narrow days
Tell me what does become of the narrow days that pinch up all the time in between morning and night so that in the middle is a quick rushed river that cuts deep and doesn’t leave room for morning coffee or night tea but is just sandwiched for lunch in the middle so tight that when you go to bite into it all you get is the thin air that rushes out of your lungs on the last narrow day that you didn’t know would be your last.
Not sure about this one
A king doth slain on wincely waves
A prince quath born on bright sunny day
A battle will waged between son and father
If only a fight for quaffle and potter
Dripple dropple durble
On top of tickle topple knots dreamed of dropping dribble clots hoped it wouldn’t play this way and lived to fight another day last and lest the sun does shine for you and I and bubble wine drink and choke and sober up slit and cut and burble slurp dripple dropple durble durp.
Safe here
Holy how long have you been listening, glistening from the tree tops above, where my musical notes don’t reach, and your ears are shut out from what everyone hears, here where there’s a community of like-minded individuals, powerful like the mob, or there where it’s all one all you, lonely if not for the unique magic that you create for yourself.
Come back to us dear, we miss you so badly as we miss anyone else, come back and hear the headless harken, the waves that don’t break, save the lack for a beach, the slack for a rope that hangs itself, the self same love that hands its own shoulders, and all for what you wanted but never found out there alone, come back to us dear, you’ll be safe here.
Fully empty
I feel full in the sense that I am empty. I’ve let it all go and it’s out there. More than I could've held within myself. And now there's more space to let more in.
What a full three days feels like
I have no concept of how much time has passed on this vacation. I think, how else have I spent three days before? So many threes, not so full as these past three.
Love change
Do we change until we become someone that somebody will love?
No remedy
When I want a remedy Sip and sweet and see Like a bumble bee There’s no relief
A cloud letter
Up along the water skies I left a little letter. It said that so was what you know and nothing would get better. So I was scared without you there and and started to expect. That what was next would carry less but keep us light and lifted.
The grass is here
White roofed in green tall trees I wonder about who lives there. So when wonder weighs what won’t be held it’s hard to keep it quiet. Why don’t you lead with what you see and just let me follow. The grass is here the water too so nature's sights will wile.
Apple whites
Apple whites in starry night that fickle fights do fumble. Up and all the leaves do fall that tear my heart asunder. So please do pray that all these days have meaning. Other wise my solemn eyes might find a reason not to.
Straight on
Straight on the road that I’m so excited to be on as long as I don’t think too much about where we’re going.
Lines like
Lines like I love them but they only go so far to keep us together when all the rushing inside the lines is what gives it life anyway. Watch the lines and listen to them but don’t obey for too long otherwise all the rushing will slow.
Seeds in the sky
I love that when you’re here like the lights on don’t bother you and the sky folds down to lift us up from the dirt where we’re supposed to grow but you can’t forget about the seeds in the sky that grow down.
Right when
Right when I get to what I think is what I’m supposed to be doing with my friends that all seem to think they have it together, that’s when it wrecks what I thought I’d be able to hold onto that’s slipping out of my grasp so all I can do is let go what leaves and keep what stays.
Where the high falls
You release into Dionysian ecstasy too early, even though there are diminishing returns to appreciating the increase in ecstasy at those high levels. You push to go higher but you’re only moving horizontally, not really enjoying it as much anymore but still just holding onto the plateau for fear of falling while your wings are burning the whole time.
Better to keep the ecstasy channeled in Apollonian and let it grow in tiers. This way the ecstasy fills each tier and is “saved” in some sense and the drug high can grow and grow, slowly but consistently, upward.
Feeling conversation
“I sometimes find myself not hearing what they’re saying and just feeling what they’re feeling, when in conversation,” F tells me.
A feeling of connectedness
I asked F, “What’s it like when you get deeper in your meditations?”
“I sort of dissolve,” F said. “It’s more of a lack of me. A feeling of connectedness that exists all around me.”
Hugging
I’ve noticed that after I’ve had a hug, I’m less afraid to die. I feel more connected and content just to let my ego melt into everything else.
My whole apartment
Sometimes it seems small. When I’ve gotten used to it and I know every square inch so well, it seems to fold in on itself. When I’ve come back home at the exact same time and cooked the same dinner and lighted the same candle and meditated on the same cushion, I get claustrophobic and push on the walls to let in some air.
Other times, right after I’ve gotten back from vacation or when I’m having a friend over and showing them around, I have to stand a little taller to touch the ceiling, my bookcase seems to have another shelf, and the artwork I have hanging up opens my walls out into the world. When I start to look closely enough, it’s really myself that starts to feel small, like I could run for miles and never traverse across my whole apartment.
Easterner in the West
I am Westerner by birth and Easterner by self-education. I wonder if I would have educated myself on the West if I’d been born in the East? Seems I was doomed to live in the middle either way.
My Mother Was An Artist
My mother was an artist. In her hometown she got sick and went to see the medicine woman in the fields. The medicine woman was there and my mother’s mother was still alive and she knelt there in the fields among rows of other people that had passed on. They all knelt down in the dirt on a sunny day. Here they came to life again, in the medicine woman’s field.
My mom was sick. You only went to see the medicine woman when you were already sick. If you were healthy, the dead would make you sick anyway. When you were sick already, it didn’t matter. My mother held me in her arms. I was sick too. I was a baby too young to remember this story.
My mother knelt in the field next to her mother, my grandma. My grandma knelt there in the dirt looking very somber and worn down by being in the sun all day. My grandma held a baby boy also. He was my mother’s baby brother, John. He would have been my uncle had he not died before he was one year old.
My mother knelt next to my grandmother and communicated via the medicine woman. My grandma whispered to the medicine woman and the medicine woman turned and translated to my mother. My grandmother, via the medicine woman, told my mother that she was proud of her. She also said, holding dead baby John in her arms, that I looked to be very healthy. I was a little younger than one year old at the time, just like dead baby John.
The medicine woman said that it was time for us to go. This did not phase my grandmother. She knew that it was as things must be. She maintained her same somber disposition. Her golden cheeks eternally tanned by the sun of the dead. She whispered one last thing to the medicine woman and the medicine woman turned to my mother and told her, “She wants you to know that she loves you.” My mother cried a single tear in the soil of the dead. Then the medicine woman said that we really must go.
She led us away from my mother and through rows of other dead people kneeling in the soil. We came out of the rows and reached a road and departed from the dead. In the real world, the fields of the dead were a gift shop filled with pictures. There were many aisles of framed pictures of deceased loved ones. They hung on the artificial walls like books sorted in the shelves at a library.
The medicine woman told my mother, earlier this morning I sold the first one of your mother’s pictures. She only has four photos left now and then she will move on from the fields and rejoin the sun.
Thank you, my mom said to the medicine woman, putting her hand on the woman’s shoulder. I will come back and see her again once more before she passes on. I will have one more question to ask her. Well, why did you not ask her today? asked the medicine woman. Because I don’t know the question yet, replied my mom.
The medicine woman smiled and said that she understood. With me as a baby still in her arms my mother said goodbye to the medicine woman and left the fields of the dead, or in reality, a picture gift shop where souls waited in purgatory to pass on into the sun.
Small, stupid lie
I lied today. It was a small, stupid lie. I lied about something that happened in college. In truth it was a story that my friend told me. I lied and said it was me that was there. I feel bad about it now. I wish I could take it back. I said it just to impress the person that i was talking to. It wasn’t worth it.
Objective joy
All joy that comes from your subjective place in space and time, dispense with it. This joy will come and go, beyond your control, and is not to be relied upon.
Learn to focus on the joys of the objective world—the sun rising, the grass growing, people talking. Anything that will remain the same for as long as you live. But even those examples are not truly objective. They are subjective insofar as they depend upon your sight to see and your ears to hear.
All that is truly objective is your Consciousness—that which remains, even when you rise up and out of your subjective ego. It is to your Consciousness, regardless of what fills it, that your joy should be attached.
Such a door
Keep me up all night alright I get it but you don’t have to be such a door about letting people pass through and just get to where they’re going when they might even give you a nice wave if you’d let ‘em but you’re so stuck on being closed all the time and forcing people to pay tribute to your function when you could just do what you’re supposed to and pay it no mind and save your energy for staying open as long as possible.
Political words
When I just start a sentence and it makes at least some sort of sense it’s like rolling a ball down a hill where I really only need that first push and then the momentum takes over where I’m not even thinking of the real world anymore and I’ve lifted off into this elevated plane where the words all still exist but they don’t have to be used like usual anymore.
They’re free to relate to one another like they’re all meeting for the first time and being polite and not trying to make assumptions where each of them belongs so you end up with run-on sentences and too many conjunctions and in a sense you’ve wasted all your time up there on the elevated plane but in another sense it’s the only time worth spending, where you’re saying everything for the first time and actually experiencing whatever it is before you say it instead of the other way around.
Self-fulfilling prophecy
It wouldn’t have been such a thing as you believed, if you hadn’t believed it in such a way that made it so.
Darn near the same
Hear and ear, see and eye, feel and feet —these are similar words.
Night fight
In suckle nights In fickle fights A tooth, a ring, A beating
Wobble
When it comes to pass that all the mass was really just a wobble.
Problems
I lay awake and suppose there isn’t anything I could have done differently with a day like this one which happened to be full of all the things with which a day is usually filled except for the feeling that anything was really done that hadn’t been done before.
That feeling irks the god in me. I let it go; content to lay here in my bed at night and breathe it all away. Tomorrow is a new day and my memory has gotten so bad recently that I rarely remember what I was worrying about the day before. I was worried about this until I realized that most of my problems aren’t really worth solving. They’ll sort themselves out or come up again slightly more dire further down the road and I’ll have to deal with them then but there are only a few of these that come up again.
Most of my problems don’t need dealing with right away. It’s only that other people don’t have it so good that irks me about this. Not everyone can lay up in their bed and just breathe and be safe and fed. So sometimes I think I’ve worked out a good system for dealing with my own problems but then I think I better get started on everyone else’s.
It gets messy when you consider some people create their own problems. It’s the ones that really had no choice that I want to help first. But then again I consider maybe the people who create their own problems don’t have a choice either.
Mistakes
I made several mistakes today. I am trying to part ways with the anger and learn from them. Mistakes are relative, I suppose. For example, I bruised both my big toes playing soccer today. My cleats were too small. Now my big toes are black and blue. This mistake is relative to a world where toes are not supposed to be black and blue. This is the world we live in.
6:23am nonsense
“it what’s i’m complex … when on drugs.”
Meditating while holding my breath
If I close my eyes and focus on the backs of my eyelids while holding my breath, when my lungs scream for air and I am just about to pass out, my consciousness explodes and the darkness behind my eyes expands and I enter like a rocket ship deeper into the meditation but then I must gasp for air and my consciousness resurfaces to my senses.
(It’s as if you can organically micro-dose “fear of death” and it brings you immediately deeper into the meditation).
Creation story
The Will has to be individuated into an ego in order for effects to be realized in space and time.
The Self could not get to a goal as it was, because it is not the nature of the Self to act. The Self just was and nothing necessarily needed to be done.
The creation story begins when all of a sudden there was something to be done. And the Self created mankind, beings capable of doing. He gifted unto them fragments of the Will subjected to time and space—thus mankind is striving after what the Self needed us to achieve but couldn’t on His own.
Too late wisdom
I am learning how to live, finally. But my body will be too old soon.
Just not forever
I can love anyone, just not forever.
The poor man
Woe to the poor man who cannot find his place in the economy. Though he may have many great skills, his misfortune is that they are not the ones for which people pay.
Read something other than myself
In my writing I hit a creative block and my instinct is to read what I’ve written before to get an idea, but then I think: why not read something new? I’m afraid because I forget easily and don’t want to lose what I have from before. This is limiting, holding on to the past. I probably will forget, but no matter. I’ll replace it with something new.
Slowly and consistently
You cannot do everything all at once, you can only do it slowly and consistently with the time you’ve got.
Perfect moments
A few moments are perfect, like the movies. Everyone is beautiful. The conversation is clever. Laughs are haughty. Someone speaks another language to the foreign waiter. Everyone is in love. We think to ourselves, it can’t get better than this.
I think of Nietzsche’s idea of eternal recurrence. The idea that even just one perfect moment can make an entire life of less-than-perfect moments worth reliving.
Unsuccessful people give into short-term pleasures in normal everyday moments. Successful people spend the normal moments preparing to make the perfect ones possible.
More to lose
The more safe and secure I got, things got less flexible. I lost hope for potentiality. My art suffered. The more I was given, the less I was willing to give up. As I was happier, I was less likely to up and leave for something else. I had more to lose.
Needs
I satisfy my needs until I’m all out of needs and then I wait for new needs.
Conversation with M
“What inspired it?” M asked.
“Nothing really,” I said. “Just thought of it in the barber shop one day. And finally got the time to finish it today.”
“I wish I had that kind of imagination.”
“It’s a weird thing. I didn’t used to. When I was good at math and remembering stuff. Now my head’s so empty. So there’s more room. Less room in your lawyer brain.”
“Your head is not empty,” she kindly assured me.
It was useless to argue with her.
“I start school tomorrow. So even less room,” she said.
“Are you excited to meet your classmates?” I asked.
“Only because it is new and refreshing.”
“Isn’t that why we do anything?”
“Oh I don’t know about that, people find comfort in routine and familiarity.”
Again, there was no point in arguing with her.
“You’re right,” I said.
The Little Ant: A Short Story
The little ant couldn’t remember how he had gotten lost. He was in the middle of an expanse with no sense of direction. The ground under his feet was hard. He had nothing with him other than the grain of rice that he held in his mandibles. He had no thoughts in his head other than delivering the grain of rice to the colony. It was so peculiar, the little ant thought to himself, that he could not remember anything from before. He could not remember the queen, not specifically at least. He could not remember what she looked like, only that he did in fact have a queen. He could not remember his brothers or the tunnels inside the ant hill, only that he did in fact have a home and the colony was waiting for him and depending on him to deliver the grain of rice.
The first few seconds, which are whole days in ant time, the ant spent in despair. “How did this happen to me?” he asked himself over and over again. He felt disconnected, alone, and purposeless. The colony is the reason to live for an ant. Without his queen and worker brothers, the ant felt no energy for life. But he still had the grain of rice in his mandibles. He had a duty to the colony, he remembered. Thus concluded his period of despair and reintroduced to the little ant the resolve that is customary for his kind.
He was hungry. He thought of taking a little bite from the grain of rice. No he could not, he told himself. It was for the colony. The colony needed it more than he did.
The little ant looked around to see in what direction he might start to search for the colony. He was in a foreign place, or at least a place that he did not remember. In all directions, it was only flat and there was nothing noticeable to be seen. The little ant realized there was nothing that would tell him which direction to choose. He picked up the grain of rice with his mandibles and started off in the direction that he was already facing.
It was many minutes that the little ant marched straight in the same direction. He was careful to pay attention to the movements of his legs. Because he had no information neither from his sight nor from the smell of the colony, he had to be careful this his steps on the left and right sides were equal, to guarantee that he moved forward in the same straight line. He was also counting the number of steps that he took to know exactly how far he had traveled.
If he did not find anything in this direction, he would turn around and walk back in the exact same direction from where he came. He reasoned to himself that he could not be far from the colony. He did not want to risk marching off in the wrong direction, away from the colony. He planned to set out on equidistant paths from the center where he started. This would allow him to cover the most ground, closest to where he began.
There were occasionally long ropes scattered on the hard floor. The little ant dared not leave his track to examine them until he came across one of the ropes in his path. It was not a rope, but a strand of hair. It was much longer than ant hair. He wondered to what kind of beast such a long hair could belong. He wondered if such a beast had anything to do with his separation from the colony. The little ant felt a sudden fear for the colony. He hoped they were safe from this great beast. He stepped over the hair and shuddered as he did. He continued on the same path, keeping his left and right steps equal.
The little ant had no way of keeping track of time other than the steps he had counted. He had taken twenty-five-thousand-six-hundred-and-twenty-eight steps. He had not stopped other than to briefly examine the strand of hair from the great beast. The little ant wondered to himself how many steps he would take before he would turn around and retrace his steps backwards. He cursed his predicament for he had no sense of how large was this vast expanse that he was in. If he only knew, then he could determine how far he needed to travel in each direction. The best he could do was to guess.
The ant was now more hungry than he was before. Time would become a factor unless he found something else to eat. He would dare not take even the smallest bite from the grain of rice. The rice was for the colony. There was no purpose in him even returning to the colony if he did not bring the grain of rice.
When the little ant reached fifty-thousand steps, he turned around. He was very careful when he turned. He composed himself and stood straight as an arrow in the direction that he was facing. He took note of the position of his body. He would do it in two movements, he decided. The first would be a quarter-turn to his right. He would then make a second quarter-turn to complete a one-hundred-and-eighty degree-turn so that he would be facing, hopefully, in the exact direction from which he came. He cursed himself for not marking the spot from which he had originally departed. He could have carved a large “X” in the floor with his mandible. Now he had no way of knowing if the measurements and count for his steps were accurate. He would have to trust them. He had no choice.
The ant started his fifty-thousand-step journey. He crossed the large strand of hair at roughly the same step, which was a good sign that he was on the right track. When the ant counted his fifty-thousandth step, he started the count over. He was now tracing new steps.
When the ant was a third of the way into his journey in the second direction, there was all of a sudden a great shadow cast over the whole of the expanse for as far as the little ant could see in any direction. Instinctually, the little ant dropped the grain of rice from his mandibles and did his best to crawl atop it and cover it with his body (the grain of rice was several times the size of the little ant). Just as quickly as it had come, the shadow passed and the light from an unknown source returned to the whole landscape. The little ant shuddered. What was that? He wondered to himself. Did it have anything to do with the giant strands of hair that were scattered all around? Did the shadow belong to the great beast?
The little ant stood immobilized for some time. What would he do if confronted with such a large beast? He did not know, he told himself. There was only one thing he could do. He picked up the grain of rice in his mandibles. Before he began again, he realized that he might have lost his direction slightly after having thrown his body on top of the grain of rice and losing his footing as a result. There was nothing he could do about it now. He reset his track as best he could and took a step to continue on.
Nothing occupied the little ant’s mind other than the count of his steps and the soft embrace with which he gripped the grain of rice in between his jaws. He started to feel a kinship with the rice. At first he scolded himself for giving into delirium. He longed for the companionship of his brother ants and his queen. It was not for an ant to be alone. Still, even as he admonished himself, he could not help but feel connected to the grain of rice. At times, he swore that he could feel a soft rhythm like a heartbeat against his mandibles. It was only the vibrations from his steps, he told himself. Grains of rice did not have heartbeats.
He had now gone more than forty-thousand steps in this second direction. He was twice as hungry as before. He started to feel a weakness in his legs and mandibles but dared not pay attention to this. He was still likely very far from the colony. He did not even know anything about where he was. The most frightening thought crept into his mind, the colony might be no more.
After all, he did not remember anything. How could he be so sure that he even had a colony? The little ant shook his head, trying to shake out these thoughts. He admonished himself two-fold: for having thoughts in the first place, and for not keeping his head straight and rigid in the interest of staying on the path.
There was no productive outcome of thoughts like these, he reminded himself. The only productive thoughts led to action in the service of the colony. Any thoughts that led to either inaction or action not in service of the colony were thoughts not to be had. The little ant marched on, recommitted to his steps and maintaining the posture of his mandibles, even though the joints of his jaw had started to ache severely—the ant didn’t think of this.
At precisely forty-four-thousand-five-hundred-and-eighty-six steps, there was another shadow. This shadow was different, however. It was static and non-moving, not like the beast’s. The little ant set down the grain of rice carefully to get a better look. In the distance there was a vague color not like the hazy blur of nothingness. It was a wall! He could not see the ceiling but he knew it was a wall. The little ant did not know how he knew this, or from where he had learned the concept of a “room.” But he knew it, as sure as he believed that he had come from a colony.
The wood inside of a wall would provide an ideal home for a colony. The little ant contained his excitement and reminded himself to focus on only two things: counting his steps and holding the grain of rice in his mandibles.
The little ant passed fifty-thousand steps in this second direction. According to the plan, he should have turned around. However, finding the wall justified an update to the plan—the little ant reasoned with himself.
At sixty-three-thousand-one-hundred-and-twenty-nine steps, the little ant stopped with the grain of rice against the wooden, painted-white floorboard of the wall. The little ant didn’t move. He surveyed to the left and the right, along the floorboard. To the right, the floorboard appeared to go on out of sight, undisturbed. To the left, there was a part where the head of a nail protruded from the floorboard and it looked as if the board was pulled slightly away from the wall. Maybe there was an opening where he could get in, the little ant said to himself.
The risk of exploring the possible opening was that the little ant would have to abandon the rigid structure of his exploration. He could not, however, pass up this opportunity to explore the opening. He resolved to measure, as best he could, the angle at which he now faced the floorboard. The little ant determined it was about sixty-degrees with respect to the floorboard to his right, and therefore one-hundred-and-twenty degrees with respect to the floorboard to his left.
It was becoming difficult for the little ant to remember all these numbers. He made it easier for himself by dispensing with all the other superfluous pieces of information in his mind which were not essential to bringing the grain of rice to the colony. He systematically disposed of any emotions and any ideas about where he had come from.
Then, returning his mind to the numbers, the little ant realized, if the room was rectangular (he seemed to recall that most rooms were), the line along which the little ant had explored thus far, which ran exactly one-hundred-and-thirteen-thousand-one-hundred-and-twenty-nine steps, was diagonal with respect to the walls of the room. This being the case, the little ant imagined he might amend his plan and, instead of returning back to the center where he would continue in a third direction, he would search along this floorboard until he found a corner of the room. The chances were greater, he reasoned, that he would find a corner if he followed the board to the left. If he found a corner, he could make estimates for the size and the shape of the room, given the measurements he already had. This was assuming, of course, that he would not find the colony behind the opening between the floorboard and the wall.
All this, the little ant thought of, while still standing motionless facing the floorboard with the grain of rice pinched gently in between his mandibles, careful not to adjust even slightly his exact position until he was sure that he had all the measurements he needed. He was sure now. He turned to his left and started to move carefully along the floorboard towards the protruding nail which the little ant assumed would mark an opening to the interior of the wall.
At only two-hundred-and-forty-seven steps from where he had first faced the floorboard, the little ant came to the protruding nail. There was indeed a small opening between the board and the wall where the paint was chipped away. It was roughly the width of three little ants. Peering into the opening, it was like a long dark cave. The little ant was afraid. He dispensed with this emotion as superfluous. The colony might be at the end of this cave, the little ant told himself. He adjusted the grain of rice in between his mandibles, made his way into the cave, and started leftward.
It was dark. There was a thin ray of light that seeped in between the top of the floorboard and the wall. This ray illumined only a small part of the little ant’s path inside the cave. He relied mostly on the sense of the board to his left and the wall to his right, as he occasionally bumped into either side with the grain of rice. The little ant was very sorry to the grain of rice each time that this happened. He tried with all his strength and concentration to avoid these bumps but he had become very hungry and weak as a result. He occasionally faltered to either side as his legs had begun to fail.
After seventy-four steps from the opening of the floorboard, faintly at first, then louder; the little ant could hear a bustle up ahead. At first he was excited. It’s the colony! He told himself. The end of his journey is near! The little ant marched forward with a newfound exuberance and strength. He craned his neck and hoisted the grain of rice high. He thought of seeing the queen and his brothers.
Then the little ant’s exuberant march slowed. He listened closer to the bustle and his stomach turned. He listened to the heavy steps and their rhythm. They were not like ant steps. They were heavy and spaced out. This was something bigger than an ant.
The little ant stopped and stared as deep into the cave as he could. Whatever it was was coming closer, straight towards the little ant, and fast. The little ant took a step backwards, and then another. By the time the hairy fangs became visible in the thin ray of light, the little ant was moving backwards as fast as his legs would carry him. He could have moved faster if he dropped the grain of rice, but he dared not. The spider was very fast and closing the distance between them.
In his mind the little ant displaced his fear and counted his steps backward. Twenty-five … fifteen … five … Just as the ant whipped his backside to the left where he knew he would find the opening, the spider lunged forward and snapped his fangs after the little ant.
Outside the cave, bathed in light, the little ant laid on his back inviting in air through his spiracles. For a brief moment the ant allowed horror at the spider to take the place of his concern for the grain of rice. When he realized the grain was no longer clenched between his mandibles, the ant jumped to his feet only to find that there was something very wrong with one of his front legs. As he tried to support himself, he fell forward onto his right mandible. The spider had severed his right front leg at the joint. A clear liquid seeped out from where the little ant’s leg was detached.
This injury, however, was secondary to his concern for the grain of rice. He looked around, ignoring the pain in his leg. Luckily, the grain was beyond the opening in the floorboard. The little ant limped over and picked up the grain with his mandibles.
The little ant felt his pain only insofar as he needed it to assess his ability to carry on. Combined with his hunger, the loss of blood was now weakening the little ant significantly. He would carry on. There was nothing else to do. With the grain of rice securely in his jaws, the little ant limped along the floorboard in the leftward direction (relative to where he had first faced the board). The little ant shuddered to think that the spider was just on the other side of the board. He could not get out, the little ant told himself. The opening was too small. Besides, he could not think of that. He had to continue on in this direction no matter what.
The little ant carried on. He continued to count his steps. It helped him to ignore the pain in his leg. This would be the last segment of his journey, the little ant knew. He would not be able to return to the center and continue his systematic exploration.
The little ant thought of nothing. He did not even process the information that came in through his eyes. He did not smell. He did not think of anything other than the count of his steps, and increasing the number by moving forward. All the while, clear liquid seeped from his leg.
He carried on like this, until step thirty-thousand-seven-hundred-and thirty-eight since the opening in the floorboard, the little ant ran headlong into another wall. He had reached the corner! Though the little ant could not spare any energy for excitement.
He craned his neck upward and started to climb. Normally, the little ant could have climbed the wall vertically. Impaired as he was without the full function of his right front leg, he was forced to crawl up the corner with his right shoulder relying on one of the walls for support. With his neck craned back as far as possible, he could just barely keep the grain of rice in his mandibles from scraping against the wall. Like this, the little ant climbed.
At several points, he stopped to rest, focusing all his strength on the grip of his claws that held him to the wall. He feared if he did not do this occasionally, he would fall backwards. How high the little ant climbed did not matter, he had no room left in his mind for the fear of his own death. He could not even remember the numbers anymore, not the angles nor the steps he had taken. That was all beside the point now.
The stops for rest grew more frequent until with every step the little ant feared he might let go. Then the wall that made up the left half of the corner, gave way to a countertop. The little ant scrambled onto this flat surface, thankful for the ground to rest his tired legs and the space to adjust his craned neck. The ant rested, with the grain of rice clenched in his mandibles. He would die with the grain of rice in his jaws, he told himself. He felt that death was near.
The little ant got up to his feet. The clear liquid had stopped seeping from his front leg. The little ant wondered if he had any blood left. He wondered if he had already died and he was now just hallucinating. The little ant looked around at what lay on the countertop. He did not recognize anything. The shampoo bottles and electric razors made no sense to him. They were all merely objects that were not his colony, and therefore meaningless.
It was towards the end for the ant. He knew this. His eyes were starting to dim. For the first time in his long journey, the little ant started to lose hope. He knew he only had the energy for a short distance. He crawled towards the row of hair product cans. He stumbled and fell every two or three steps. He made his way behind the cans and laid down on his back. How long he spent like this he did not know. There was almost no light left in the world.
The little ant had been unconscious for some time when he woke with a start. There was another ant leaning over him. The little ant thought that he was seeing himself. It was his spirit, the little ant told himself. His spirit spoke to him. It said, “Well done, brother.” The spirit ant touched his mandibles to the little ant’s. The little ant felt the mandibles. This was not a spirit ant, the little ant realized.
He heard other voices. He turned his head slowly with what little strength he had left. There were a dozen or so ants. The little ant breathed a sigh of relief. He leaned his head back. They were talking about a great beast. Many ants were lost. These were among the few survivors.
With what little strength he had, the little ant opened his eyes. There was another ant leaning over him, assessing him, clicking his mandibles in thought. He watched this ant look away at the others and shake his head. This ant too touched his mandibles to the little ant’s.
The brother ant came back; he seemed to be the leader of the survivors. “I brought the grain of rice,” the little ant said to him, “for the colony.” He took a shallow breath with great effort
The brother ant looked at the little ant, confused. “What do you mean?” asked the brother ant.
“The grain of rice,” whispered the little ant. “I brought it … food … for the colony.”
The brother ant laughed. “That is not a grain of rice, brother! That is an egg. And not just any egg, brother. It is a queen egg.”
The little ant was overcome with warm rapture. He asked himself, how had he not known? But then again, how could he have? He had never before seen a queen egg.
While the little ant was thinking to himself and remembering the encounter with the spider and the climb up the cliff face and how he could have lost the queen egg. He silently thanked the almighty for granting him the strength to deliver the queen egg back to the colony.
The brother ant continued, “We lost our queen in the battle with the great beast. Without her, we were all prepared to die soon. Without a reason to live, we had thought of throwing ourselves from the cliff here. You have delivered life and purpose to us, brother. We will rebuild a new colony for the new queen.”
The rest of the ants gathered around the little ant. An ant much larger and stronger than the little ant now carried the queen egg in his mandibles. The rest of the ants clicked their mandibles in honor of the little ant. “Sleep now, brother. You have done your duty to the colony.” The little ant relaxed his mandibles and leaned his head back and went to sleep.