Back to the desert. Silence, darkness, the earth immobilized beneath a gentle wheel of stars. Existence’s sensory deprivation chamber, the radical nudity of the geography like some cosmic conspiracy for solitude. You stood there and breathed uneasily and wondered if you would ever feel this significant again.
If only we could stop thinking, being. We could live forever.
Depressives. They have a knack for teasing out reality at its most undressed: their spouses are unlovable; their childhood dreams unattainable; death inevitable. This is seen unflinchingly, and known flinchingly. Happiness requires a kind of existential blindfold—normally (and thankfully) provided by biology—without which we’d be incapable of enjoying a sandwich or a concert without simultaneously cowering in anticipation of the very worst of life’s most staggering inevitabilities. Lovers lost, children lost, a death in assisted living—god forbid the fabric slip.
The alternative view, of course—staggering inevitabilities lend joy its immediacy. That without the torque of failure, existence itself would have no potency, no grip. This is a game called See Your Life, See every passing moment slipping quietly into the vast dross of its undifferentiated antecedents, nothing measured and nothing lost.
Gravity versus weightlessness.
It’s easy to take a trip to the desert and be astounded and assign it grave cosmic importance, and just as easy to smile and sigh and enjoy a much-needed escape into wilderness. Questions abound on which the proper attitude “should” be—as if anyone but ourselves could ever determine where to place value in our lives—as if “should” were a real word that actually had any power to imply that gravity or weightlessness could ever win the argument over the other. We’re always the ones that finally decide what’s important to us, and how. “Should” is inert.
Take that to the desert or the street or city hall or your girlfriend’s house, take to the pastrami shop or the roller rink or the fields of corn around your family’s home, Soldier Field, Salt Lake, Mt. McKinley. Go to the place that makes you quiet inside, go with all the fire of god smoldering passion salvation in that tight hard knot of your heart. Go like you might not come back so when you go again you can stay forever. Walk like one of the crazies of lore chanting mad poems of glory or just slip by in a thin grinning shimmer of zen. This is where you go. This is what you do.
And yet the question still remains, always remains: Now what?
Now you go to the next desert, is what. Or maybe you don't.
It's all so very important.
Saturday, May 30, 2009
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