30 September 2004

Ichabod Day

Today feels like the first day of fall to me…not because it's necessarily cold, but because I have noticed for the first time that most of the leaves have been liberated from the trees. It opens things up, makes things feel larger, and yet more mystical at the same time. There is a starkness to the trees that create an ambiance like something out of a Tim Burton film. I half expect Ichabod Crane to come galloping down Pivot Rock Road with a lantern and windswept leaves crackling beneath clocking hooves.


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17 April 2004

Space Invader


It started out with me on my way to the grocery store, having awakened with no coffee in the house-a tragedy all on its own. I thought of that little coffeeshop down the street and thought maybe I'd stop in to check it out, so I brought what i lovingly refer to as my Tippi Tap Typer just in case.

Roscoe's Music and Espresso Café was a tiny establishment, but intriguing. It was time I tried to get out of the house a little and use my new toy in a different environment. I ordered a White Chocolate cappuccino and chatted with the owner for a few minutes, and then a young woman walked in. The first thing I noticed was that she immediately invaded my space. We exchanged pleasantries. The tiny coffeeshop was no bigger than most people's kitchens, and I tried to move aside, but she hemmed me right in, ordering his house blend.

The proprietor, Roscoe, informed her that he was just now making a new pot. She asked how long it would take, and he said just long enough for the water to run through.

"Could you give me some sort of idea, then?"

"Two point 3 minutes."

"Jolly Good," she exclaimed.

Jolly good? That's when it dawned on me that she had a British accent.

Roscoe started the brew and the Space Invader waited, turning a bit to examine a painting on the wall. She then would not let me get past her to sit down out of the way, so I just turned back around and stayed where I was. I don't think it was intentional. I noticed the Bible she was holding behind her, clutching it almost fiercely, standing erect, as if a recruit at attention. My first reaction was Oh great, a religious zealot. I was afraid she'd try to witness to me. Faith is a wonderful thing, but those who wander around with little else other than a Bible, are bound to launch into some religious tirade or hackneyed effort to save my soul. I had already noticed that my communication skills were suffering from caffeine withdrawals, so I didn't feel up to the challenge.

Then she did the inevitable witnessing. Thankfully, to Roscoe. "Have you ever read the Bible?

I understood him to say yes, but heard him counter with another book he had read, asking her if she had read it. She said no, there was much too much in her head right now… But she had realized that the Bible had everything in it she needed, about life and love and so on, and that we should read it, because it answers so many questions… I asked her if she had read The Seat of the soul for the same reasons. She said no, as he poured her cup and handed it to her. She carried her House Blend out to the patio and sat, lighting a Camel filter right next to the sign that read Thank you For Not Smoking.

Roscoe gave me a knowing look, and whispered, "She comes in here a lot…she's been in and out of institutions…she's staying at the halfway house up here…doing pretty well now…except that today, she seems to be British." I was surprised and intrigued. It was clear what the implication was, now. HE motioned me to follow and pointed out the front window. "See that tower, right over there between that building and the water tower is a halfway house for people who are…"

"Halfway?" I offered.

He smiled.

Three people come in, and I comment, "oh look out, you're getting a rush."

He laughs. The people order, one of them a lady who says she misses her coffee, as she is from "Coffee country." I engage her…ask if it's Seattle…she says another town in Washington, above Seattle and I tell her I'm thinking of moving to that area in May. She says what she doesn't miss is the dismal weather and I confess I love weather like that.

I put a five dollar bill on the counter, so that I won't forget to pay.

The Space Invader Zealot returns asking for a refill, saying, "I should think that this much coffee cannot possibly be good for the stomach." She takes her refill back out.

I carried my coffee and Typer out to the deck for a little fresh air and maybe morbid curiosity, so that I could be within earshot and eyeshot of her. She comments on what a lovely day it is, and I agree. Shortly, I hear her chuckle. I look up and she is smoking, smiling, and whispering a few words to some unseen table companion. I know then, she really is certifiable. She sucks on her camel filters, and makes properly British faces, laughing, obviously enjoying the repartee of the voices in her head.

I am intrigued enough to want to talk to her, but intimidated enough not to. How does one talk to a crazy person without sufficient psychological experience? What if I say something that screws up this reality she has created for herself? What if that little swim in the cerebral fluid garners me a proper British drowning? I move to the smoking section, situated at a picnic table behind her, lighting a cigarette of my own, and bend back to my writing.

A moment later, I notice Birkenstock knockoffs a few feet from my table and look up.

"Excuse me, " she says. "I am out of smokes…can I give you 50 cents for one, or something?"

"Oh, no, here," I give her two. "It's awful to run out when you're addicted."

"Isn't it though?" She returns to her table and lights up.

A young man approaches, asking about my typing gadget and I give him the sales pitch and he seems interested, then wanders back into the café. I wondered why he came outside just to ask me about my Typer. After he leaves, Space Invader turns around and says, "These are delicious cigarettes."

Delicious? "I'm glad you like them. Most people don't because they're menthol and lighter."

"Oh no, there's just enough menthol, and it doesn't last long, and there's this fruity aftertaste…"

"Yes," I say, while thinking, funny she would say Fruity.

Later, I go inside the café for a refill and while I wait, admire a portrait of a man who is playing harmonica. I comment on how good the painting is. Roscoe tells me it's by a local artist, and he knows the guy in the painting, played music with him for years. I see an old photo of Roscoe on the wall, jeans, no gray beard, but still a mustache, wearing one of those poofy down slicker vests, and a newsboy cap. "This is you, right?" I ask.

"Yes, a long time ago."

"I can see it's you. You have the Jack Kerouac look to you in this…you have this face that seems familiar…were you famous at one point?" I smile. "--maybe in a movie you might not claim?"

"No..." He laughs. "-- but I was in the movie they made here recently..."

"Oh, Billy Bob Thornton's movie?"

"Yeah, I got to play banjo a little."

Space Invader comes in and announces she is finished with coffee, and wanders back toward the halfway house. I finish my third cup, and settle the rest of my tab and tip him two dollars. He dubs me Customer of the Day.

Outside, I hear the now familiar laughter of the Space Invader. She is nearby, toward the road, probably standing there waiting to cross, and having a pleasant conversation with no one.



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16 April 2004

Passerby


(Published in the Arkansas Women's Journal)

I had begun the trek to my Expository Writing class that January afternoon, taking the high walkway in front of the campus bookstore, when my eyes flickered to the woman coming toward me. She was a frosted blond, middle aged, dressed professionally, and carried a soft side attaché. She held an ugly green umbrella over her head to stave off the light drizzle; the edge of the umbrella tilted just enough so that I couldn't see her face clearly.

These details swept into my brain along with a numbing suggestion that she was not a stranger, but someone I have known all my life. I looked away so quickly, caught up in my practiced apathy, that I was unable to get another look at her face, for fear she would notice me and that eye contact would result in a dreaded confrontation. My brain whirled away in a fantasy that she would see me and rush over to me, pulling at my sleeve, and tell me how very proud she was of my success at school, and of my courage in going back for a degree, and how sorry she was for the awful letter she had written when she excused herself from my life. And the fantasy evaporated abruptly when she passed by, and my heart thumped back into operation, and the veins in my neck seemed to swell, forcing the blood into my head.

I tried to catch my breath before I turned around to examine her as she moved away from me without pause across the red brick square below. Like a traumatized child, I stood there in the mist, trying to focus on her form before it moved too far away. It had to be her. But the green umbrella-- she would not carry a green umbrella. And the walk she never hobbled like that unless something happened. Unless she's had an accident of some sort since--I continued to watch her move under the canopy at the entrance of the student union, and beyond toward the parking lot, analyzing the reasons why it could not be her. She might have looked at me, but it was not for very long. I know, even though I was busy looking away. Maybe she didn't recognize me after two years. Have I changed that much? Maybe she didn't look at me at all, and that's why she kept walking. That's why she didn't react.

I stood there in my long, dark raincoat, the mist caressing my face, and wondered why it mattered at all. I wondered why I would risk being late for class for someone like her, who could not give me the time of day, nor acknowledge me as a valuable human being. How can a mother ignore her only daughter?


I checked my watch, and turned toward my destination again, refusing to take that additional glance my heart ached for. She's no longer part of my life.

If it was her.

Which I'm sure it wasn't.



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24 March 2004

The Universe That Continues To Disappear


(book review)


Okay, regarding the book, The Disappearance of the Universe: Straight Talk
About Illusions, Past Lives, Religion, Sex, Politics, and the Miracles of Forgiveness…

If you're able to suspend your disbelief, this book is really fascinating. I see that the point is not the presentation but the message, yet my editor/ writer/analytic self wishes it could just be a bit more straightforward in presentation. . .like, “Hey. These are ideas I have on god and the universe and our place on the earth plane. . .” Yet I know that credibility is an issue others have as well, and the mass media marketing machine has taught us to believe or embrace that which has some clout. Clout is indicated by association with respected and well-known authorities, success, packaging, testimonials.


The clout I seek, however, is more rooted in pragmatism. Show me a photo, provide a recording, a video, or information that is irrefutable. . .as hard as it is to allow that to be enough these days, what with the manipulative technologies we have at our disposal: Proof can be tampered with, altered, and even created in such a way as to be indiscernible from the real thing. Alas. Heavy sigh. So perhaps it comes down to what resonates for each of us. Perhaps I've come round the circle. . .perhaps I've gone round the bend. I'll explore that later.

As for the content of the book—I actually agree with some of the ideas presented, and resonate with others. I enjoy ideas that flirt with social upheaval. I like to rattle spiritual cages. This book does that. I am still reading it. It's taking me a while because of TED (my affectionate moniker for Thyroid Eye Disease). Sometimes the words just won't come into focus and I spend a lot of time trying to find just the right strength of reading glasses to wear over my contacts. . .and it's also taking me a while because I tend to read the other 8 books I have on tap at the same time. . .I have digressed again. . .(I'm only on my first cup of coffee).

The book, The Disappearance of the Universe. . .yes. Fascinating. Worth reading. Probably one of the most important cage-rattling books to come along in some time. If you can suspend your disbelief.

One problem I had, for example was the pronouncement about "only listening to the Holy Spirit." You cannot authentically say that you “only listen to the Holy Spirit” because we are human and humans often can't tell the difference between what they need to hear and what's there (or not there). When you speak of an entity for whom there is no proof, nor whom anyone has seen, it’s a stretch to say that you know what that entity is “saying” to you—in your head—like what happens to schizophrenics, I might add.

While I am a skeptic about most things, I am also spiritual and have a great affinity for things metaphysical. It is a precarious and time-consuming way to be. But it seems to work for me. Anyway. Here are some thought-provoking excerpts from the text that caught my interest:

“. . .there are people who are highly visible when, rather than being true masters of spirituality and metaphysics, they are merely exhibiting the symptoms of an extroverted personality.” (p.33.1) No doubt an aspersion at the competition for the spiritual publishing market. And in my experience there are many highly visible gurus who exhibit other personality traits that fall into the realm of “disorders.”

“. . .it doesn't matter what actions you take or don't take in the world—although your way of seeing and the attitude you maintain while engaging in any action does matter.” (p.35.3) Well now, it DOES kind of matter what actions you take and don’t take, obviously. But I do understand it’s easier to deal with the consequences if you’re a positive-thinker.

“. . .he who needs nothing can be trusted with everything.” (p.40/41). Unless it’s money he needs, and you have it and are looking the other way…I wouldn’t say this was a person to necessarily trust with my money. On the surface, then, quite a lofty and poetic statement, but it forgets human nature.

“In the end, everything except for God is metaphor.” (p. 82) This one is all very well and good, but it makes a huge assumption that God is NOT a metaphor as well. The reality is, He could be. Humans quite possibly invented him, rather than the other way around.


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19 March 2004

Close to Never (poem)

The light in your eyes
moves, dims, and behind it, I see doubt
I try to pull the words from you
And all you say is
"I don't want to lose you."

If you only knew how close you were
To never losing me
I would never see that doubt in your eyes again.


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