Wait and see

[A snippet from a writing project in gestation, which will probably make very little sense if you haven’t read these other snippets: Square one, No importa, New tables, Belly of the beast, No turning back, Memories, dreams, reflections, & El campo de pueblo.]

I’m sitting in a corner of the room, surrounded by all our belongings. Some guys are putting in the floor tile today, so my world has shrunk to a six by six foot pile of stuff while they work on the rest of the room. Presently, the workers are taking a little Pepsi break, chatting about this and that. The word chinga tends to come up a lot. Undoubtedly, they must be curious why I choose to remain in the room while they work. However misguided and ultimately self-defeating, I tend to view most others here as potential criminals, out to fuck me over as soon as the opportunity presents itself. People have families to feed, and here’s my stuff all laid out like a five-finger discount flea market. I remember a line from Fight Club: “The things you own end up owning you.” This couldn’t be more true for me right now. I am attached to my things with shackles.

At this point, I’m against putting in the tile, as a way to protest the cost being jacked up at the last moment and because the process promises to be a major inconvenience. They say “no hay problema, muy rapido,” half the tile in today and the other half tomorrow, but experience tells me to expect otherwise. The room is my safe haven, where I have established at least enough privacy, order, and control to maintain sanity. I can feel the shackles chafing.

Of course, when it’s all said and done, it will be nice to have tile, as the floor figures prominently in my plan to take over the world. How so? I’ll get to the specifics in a minute, but in general the plan is fairly simple and straightforward: To resurrect every stinking, rotting intention that lay buried in the dung-heap of apathy, excuses and half-assed efforts I spent a lifetime compiling in the U.S. Every last little desiccated seed will be resuscitated and nurtured to fruition. Among other things, this means a book will be written; a language learned; an instrument mastered; and a body and mind recalibrated, re-inhabited and renewed.

I’m sure you’ve heard it all before, from one twenty-something or another. Carpe diem and all that horse shit. If you’re a friend of mine you’ve heard it many times, straight from this horse’s mouth, especially when the beer is flowing. I’m fine with the so-called realists who like to roll their eyes and who prefer their resignation and cynicism to my pipe dreams. If I’m deluded in striving for the full realization of my potential—and I suspect that I’m naïve at the very least—what really is there to lose in persisting in my folly? I finally have the time—nine full months, all day, every day—to invest in myself, to break some long-standing patterns, to reset the game and start playing without my hands tied behind my back. If not now, when? If, in the end, the whole project provides nothing more than a few laughs for the older and wiser Future Bob, then so be it. Don’t laugh too hard though, Future Bob. It might make you shit your pants, or at least pee a little. A crack of a smile will do just fine, and makes for a suitable death mask as well.

Along with Miller’s Tropic of Cancer, I’m currently reading Full Catastrophe Living, by Jon Kabat-Zinn. Jon’s the one keeping me on the floor, experimenting with various yoga and meditation practices. About the level of commitment necessary for self-realization, Kabat-Zinn quotes psychologist Carl Jung: “The attainment of wholeness requires one to stake one’s whole being. Nothing less will do; there can be no easier conditions, no substitutes, no compromises.”

I love this kind of balls-out sentiment. Miller strikes a similar chord, vis-á-vis art: “Art consists in going the full length. If you start with the drums you have to end with dynamite”. My bandmates and I used an inside catch-phrase to capture this full-throttle vibe, demanding of ourselves and each other that we “head the gong.” Those of us who grew up worshipping the rock band Led Zeppelin know well that drummer John Bonham, who died young of a drug overdose, used a gong as part of his drum set-up. Anyway, the guys and I went out to see a Led Zep tribute band one night, and as the drummer wailed away during the famous ten-minute Moby Dick drum solo, we couldn’t help notice that he held back a little toward the end. “Dude,” I said to my friends, “if you’re going to do Moby Dick, you gotta go all the way, you gotta throw yourself head first into the gong. Yeah man, you gotta head the fucking gong!” Trust me, if you were there and full of Pabst Blue Ribbon, you would have been pumping your fists in the air.

I’ve often told myself I would one day put into print the “Head the Gong Manifesto,” making explicit to myself and to the world precisely how I intended to live, should I ever find the requisite strength and courage. My hesitation has been held in place by a couple of lines of thought, each representing a critical voice I’ve internalized over the years. The first essentially says, “You’re selfish.” This one comes straight from the bosom of my family. My lack of interest in creating and raising children is at the root of this accusation more than anything. I’ve mounted a stiff defense against this charge, pointing out the logical absurdity of choosing parenthood for the sake of not-yet-born children. I’ve trapped them with arguments that force them to admit their own inescapably selfish motives for becoming mommies and daddies. But it’s not really about any of that. They want me to do it for their sake, to affirm this most central of their values. In rejecting parenthood I’m rejecting them—it’s as simple as that. And so what I most value—this stuff about truth and awareness and developmental potential—this makes me even more of a self-centered little bastard. “The holy trinity of me, myself and I” is how my brother summed up my life. “Maybe they’re right” is a thought that comes up more than I’d like to admit. Navel gazing looks a lot like narcissism, and if it quacks like a duck it just might be a duck, right? It’s true that every minute I spend here nurturing my own seeds I could spend trying to better the lives of the people all around me, people too focused on survival to worry about drum solos or finding time to just be.

The case against me is strong—I can’t deny it. And there’s still the other line of attack, the one that says, “Even if it is worthwhile to go the full length, you just don’t have what it takes. Not. Good. Enough.” Just like that, my manifesto is transformed into yet another list of New Year’s resolutions destined to be forgotten by the time February rolls around.

Well, here’s the list, for what it’s worth: I’m going to meditate everyday; write the book I’ve been not writing for the last ten years; finish up and properly record every song idea in my cassette archives; learn Spanish, then Chinese; study a martial art; step up my exercise regimen with daily stretching and calisthenics; learn some cover tunes and refuse to shy away from opportunities to perform; rededicate myself to the study and practice of Somatic Education (a form of neuro-muscular/body work); find a way to teach for a living… I’m sure more will come to me. And I’m off to a good start, I must say – writing like a madman, Spanish improving by the day, soccer practice every night, a few days into formal meditation practice and a solid floor exercise routine.

We’ll see what it’s worth, in the end. Call it an experiment, a wait and see thing. Let’s see if by investing some quality time in me, myself and I, I might be of far greater service to others when it’s all said and done. Let’s see if I become more or less of an asshole. If it doesn’t pan out I can always just admit the error of my ways, settle down, have a few kids and let them redeem the situation.

headthegongblue

DIY

millerneimanI was reading Henry Miller last night, his essay “Artist and Public” to be precise, and was intrigued by his pipe dream to call upon the artists and art lovers of America to buy into a plan that would subsidize every artist for the duration of their lives–regardless of what they produce. What a plan! It seems nuts, to be sure, in that it seems about as likely to happen as the second coming of Christ. And while it may be true that nearly half of Americans believe Christ’s return is imminent, I’m pretty sure only a handful truly give a hoot about the plight of the artist. But it’s an interesting idea of Miller’s nonetheless, namely that it would eventually pay off, IN DOLLARS AND CENTS Miller stresses, if artists were to be supported with sufficient funds to cover all basic needs for the entire duration of their lives. The idea being that enough of these artists would produce enough great and valuable works of art to make the whole set-up generate a net profit. If Jesus does come back, maybe he can get in on the ground floor of this project. A sequel to the Bible, written by the man himself, would surely get a mention on Oprah or in the New York Times.

Also interesting was Miller’s discussion of whether or not making artists comfortable would soften them up to the point of creative impotence. Miller argues against the notion that artists need to be on the edge of starvation and desperation in order to produce great works. I’ve thought about this issue myself, as it seems that we see a classic pattern, in modern times at least, of creativity suffering once the artist “makes it,” or achieves whatever vision of success that he or she has set for him- or herself. It seems as if the creative drive winds down, or at least changes in form and intensity, as one gets older. This is something I’ve obsessed about in recent years. As a rock music fan, I’m always on the lookout for the band or artist who produces their best work after the age of forty. And I’m not finding much on that horizon. Is it getting older, or having a lot of money, or what, that causes rock stars to become karaoke acts by the time they reach their fifties? And then there’s the zeitgeist or the effect of “the times” one is living in. People often say things like “the 60s produced so much great music.” Perhaps that’s literally true, that artists are not rightly understood as individuals undertaking some lonely creative process, but rather they are inspired and compelled to do what they do by the environment they find themselves in. This “artist in context” theory might also explain why getting rich and moving into that huge mansion effectively makes the artist “soft.” Change the environment in a major way and you change the entire creative equation. Anyway, I harp on all this because I’m afraid of getting soft myself. Afraid I’ve already gotten soft. Okay, I KNOW I’ve already gotten soft. The question now is, Can I firm back up? Can I summon that creative boner when the mood is just right? Can I stoke the creative flame and produce with the sense of burning intensity and purpose I felt way back when?

A guy named John wrote the following in my high school yearbook: “Bob. Don’t think. Do.” At the time, I thought John was full of shit, and maybe he was. But the fact of the matter is that I’ve been plagued by a palpable lack of “do” my whole life.

So do something Bobby. Now that you think you may have found the key, go out and do something dude. But where’s the door? Who’s doing what now?

Just take the next step man. Trudge on. What I’d really like to do is meticulously devour each day, savor every bite, get my five dollars worth before the dream machine runs amok. Sure, I’ll take the next step forward, but then sure enough it’ll be one step backward, just so I can analyze the footprint, make sure it’s the proper shape, that the weight was distributed just right, that it’s headed in the right direction. Even though I KNOW it’s headed in the right direction.

Well then, never mind all that. Today. Forward! Trudge on, lad! No need to look down at your feet, unless you step on a snake, or a pile of bear scat. It’s too bad Henry Miller’s plan didn’t come to fruition. If it had, I might consider submitting my application, joining the program. I can’t help wonder what Henry would’ve thought about the internet, had he lived long enough to see it develop into its current form. I bet he would’ve been a blogger, like me, casting his words into the great cyber-sea. But would anyone have noticed? Would anyone have taken the time to post a comment?

Forward Bobby! Onward! Don’t think too much about such things, such terrible, horrible things! Focus on what you want. On what you need. On whether or not this keystroke, that thought, this sip of coffee, is getting you closer to or further away from the goal. Don’t wait for Jesus or Henry Miller to come back and set things right. Do it yourself. Take a step back if you want, but not until you get somewhere worth looking at.

Galvanized

Late 1780s diagram of Galvani's frog legs experiment
Late 1780s diagram of Galvani’s frog legs experiment
This morning I made my bed upon rising, fetched the paper without failing to notice the birds in all their glory, and enjoyed homemade pancakes for the first time in ages. New Year’s Day. If only I could be so galvanized every morning. Galvanized. I mentioned this word repeatedly on our long drive back and forth to Little Rock last week. That peculiar state of being energized in such a way as to practically guarantee creative action. Why, I wondered aloud during our road trip, why was I so creatively ablaze during certain periods of my life, while during others the inner flame flickered so faintly? Why was rock music so especially good in the 1960s, and then again in the 1990s? Why does greatness seem to be as much a product of the times as of the will and talent of individual human beings?

It was in the eighteenth century when Luigi Galvani discovered that a frog’s legs could be made to twitch in an electric field. A dead frog, no less. It is said that the discovery was accidental, that Galvani and his assistant were using frog skin to experiment with static electricity when a charged scalpel made contact with the exposed sciatic nerve of a recently skinned frog. As to what happened next, I will quote directly from Wikipedia, because the phrasing is just too perfect:

“At that moment, they saw sparks and the dead frog’s leg kicked as if in life.”

What a sentence! The first sentient being to be galvanized–a dead frog in 1771!

Well here I am—a human being and very much alive—inspired by the boldness of the number “1,” by the ring of the word “galvanized,” and by the fresh coffee straight from my brand new French press. Is it yet another fleeting swell of the flame caused by nothing more than some excess static charge in the air? Maybe so. But why not forge what we can while the flame is high?

New Years Rulin’s

It’s that time of year again. Time to take stock and set goals and all that shit. Me, I’m looking to crank up the creativity this year. As Maria Popova at Brain Pickings pointed out, both Tchaikovsky & Jack White agree: Inspiration AND hard work are needed to keep the creative flame burning. First Tchaikovsky:

There is no doubt that even the greatest musical geniuses have sometimes worked without inspiration. This guest does not always respond to the first invitation. We must always work, and a self-respecting artist must not fold his hands on the pretext that he is not in the mood. If we wait for the mood, without endeavouring to meet it half-way, we easily become indolent and apathetic. We must be patient, and believe that inspiration will come to those who can master their disinclination.

Then Jack:

Inspiration and work ethic — they ride right next to each other…. Not every day you’re gonna wake up and the clouds are gonna part and rays from heaven are gonna come down and you’re gonna write a song from it. Sometimes, you just get in there and just force yourself to work, and maybe something good will come out.

And then there’s folk legend Woody Guthrie, who wrote the following “New Years Rulin’s” in his journal on January 1st, 1943:

New Years Rulins

Freedom

I woke up one day and I was absolutely free. It’s hard to explain, but it boils down to this: I simply stopped doing the things that were keeping me from being free. That’s pretty much it. From there, there was nothing to left to do. Freedom is not an activity or a procedural thing. It’s a condition, a state of affairs. Freedom just is. And so I was. As a soaring eagle, only it didn’t matter that my feet rarely left the ground. The truth is, there was nothing I could do to NOT be free. I was even free to go back to doing the things that used to keep me from being free. And so I did, eventually, and for a good long while I was still free, still soaring. Then I woke up one day and realized with a deep, terrible pang of disappointment that I was most definitely no longer free. It didn’t take long, in that condition, to cast considerable doubt as to whether I had ever truly been free at all. For the next ten years or so I thought it all over. Eventually I came to the conclusion that it didn’t really matter whether or not I had been free, but only if I really wanted to be free right now. I thought about that for another ten years before deciding yeah, sure, I want to be free now. But not right now. Right now I need get through the rest of the academic semester, knock out a few big assignments, prepare for my final exams and presentations. Once I get through that rigmarole I’ll be ready to soar. I’ve marked my calendar. December 13, 2013. Sweet freedom. At least until the start of the spring semester.

Self-portrait

Henry-Miller-self-portrait

“To do a good self-portrait, one must look into the ashes. Man builds on the ruins of his former selves. When we are reduced to nothingness, we come alive again. To season one’s destiny with the dust of one’s folly, that is the trick. In the ashes lie the ingredients for portrayal of self.” – Henry Miller

I’ve overloaded the circuits is all. Too many devices flashing and beeping at once. Information everywhere and not a nugget of truth to be found. This body, this brain—a sensitive sponge sopping up whatever pool of vomit or horse piss it finds itself in. How much longer will I pretend this is all well and good? How much longer will I resist the urge to fling myself over the rail? How close to the jagged earth will I be when I finally spread my wings?

The edge

vermont

I’m somewhere above Lake Erie, contemplating what it means to find one’s edge. I suppose I’m circling around in the same old holding pattern. The edge, of course, is just another way of conceptualizing the here and now, another way to say “Head the gong.” At this point, I think I have a pretty good idea how to get to the edge from wherever I find myself and, once I’m there, to recognize that I’m there. It’s just that I find it difficult these days to hang out on the edge for any length of time. I take one peek over the precipice then retreat back to the comfort and relative numbness of the familiar circles.

In less than one hour I’ll be back at the starting line. Back where all the ghosts scud like clouds over a full moon. Home. Less than an hour till the wheels touch down. Always a heartbeat from the edge, if only I’d remember to feel for the pulse.

This morning I woke at 3am to the terrible squeal of the alarm clock. Drugged with dreams, I pushed through the internal clouds to get to the bathroom, the garage, El Paso International Airport, the line to board my flight. Now I’m up, above the clouds, the baseball diamonds, the fingertip of Erie as it probes into Pennsylvania. Heading due East, to the edge, which can be on the ground or in the air or twenty thousand leagues under the sea. It just takes a second to feel for the pulse, for the blood flowing under the surface, through the vessels, into the tissue and over the bones.

*

The weather here in Vermont is spectacular. Last night we saw several shooting stars and marveled at the glow of the Milky Way. When the sun’s up, trout dart through the pond out behind the house. The color green seeps into your soul, especially when you come, as I have, from the arid Southwest.

These lazy Vermont days have been a real tonic for me. I’ve been reading, writing, playing music, sleeping in, drinking too much, taking in nature, and enjoying all sorts of other delicious indulgences that put me in the finest fettle. It’s been so nice to have my attention span to myself, instead of caught up in the demands of graduate school.

A cool breeze drifts in through the window, carrying the steam from my cup of coffee into my field of vision. One doesn’t realize just how important creamer is to a good cup of coffee until one is forced to take it black. It’s like cocoa without sugar. Some things were made to go together. The birds are singing their morning songs, and my father-in-law has just returned from a wild mushroom hunt. His basket is full of Black Trumpets. The early bird gets the worm, the mushrooms, and the last of the creamer for his cup of coffee.

I’ve been reviewing some of the old bits of writing to see what might be worth compiling, but I can’t shake the sense that it would be better to focus my attention toward finding the edge and developing my capacity to hang out there for more than a nanosecond. Perhaps I’m being too hard on myself. It’s just that I’m so goddamned content, so edgeless, so round and soft and sleepy and secure. So pointless. I’m a cup of creamer with no coffee in it. A spoonful of sugar sans the cocoa.

*

A light rain is falling on this, my final morning here in tranquil, soul-rejuvenating Vermont. The rain dripping off the leaves reminds me that I’ll need to pee soon. I’ll also need to pack soon, to ready myself for the return journey. A four-hour drive from Vermont to the airport in Albany, NY. Three flights to get to El Paso. An hour drive home to Las Cruces. It’s been a nice break, just what the doctor ordered, and I’m ready to resume my role as regular-life me. I think I’ll be able to deliver my lines with a bit more gusto this time around. And… action!

Checking in with my breath I soon notice the weight of my bones and then the pulsing of blood through the vessels. As my attention sinks down and in, it settles on a rapidly intensifying sense of urgency. I need to poop. Right now. Welcome to the edge.

Lost in the drama

drama-skulls-cruel-imageI’m not sure anything needs to be said. There is no sense of pressure building. No longing for release. What’s lacking is enthusiasm. Urgency. Intensity. I miss these feelings that so often came with the words that were not quite in my head, not quite on the tip of my tongue but nevertheless were, suddenly, there on the page.

At 42 I miss 24, if only for the anticipation of surprises, the atmosphere of mystery. Lately I feel as if the plot has been spoiled, as if I read the last sentence first.

“And then you die.”

I’d like to forget I ever saw it, convince myself I may have been mistaken. Maybe there’s some context that will change the meaning. Maybe the whole thing turns out to be a dream. Maybe if I start again from the beginning I’ll get so lost in the drama, so absorbed in the unfolding of details that I’ll forget what I saw, or at least cast enough doubt to make things interesting again.

Home

DSCN3098I was sitting on the toilet clipping my toenails when my brother called to tell me they were pulling the plug on Dad. “Pack your bags bro…” is how that conversation started. A few minutes later he called again, this time to ask me if I wanted to say goodbye to my father before they let him go. My brother held his cell phone to my father’s ear and I had about fifteen seconds to say goodbye. I fell to the floor in tears. Head spinning, I paced around the back yard, mowed the lawn, noticed the two doves struggling to make a nest on my back deck and the two new rosebuds (the first of this Spring) that popped up overnight. Next thing I’m in the air between El Paso and Albany, writing up a draft of the obituary. Then I’m doing my Mom’s taxes, working on the eulogy with my siblings, singing at the funeral service, carrying my father’s casket through the pouring rain to the grave site. Of course it was all difficult, heart-wrenching, and beautiful too. All my time on this planet, until now, my father has been here with me. Even across the miles, he’s been here, somewhere. Now he’s gone. Not here, not anywhere. And even though I’m surely not alone, I feel as if I’ve been dropped off in the middle of nowhere, left to find my way back home. But “home,” by definition, has always been the place where my father is, and so I’m lost. Heaven is a comforting idea, for those who believe, but I’m not looking for comfort. My father is dead and I’m trying to find my way home, to a real place on this planet, where I can live and breathe and be wide awake under the real shining sun, doze and dream under real stars. I may be lost, but I’ll find my way, eventually. When I get there, it’s not going to be the same without you, Dad.

dadandbob