Archive for August, 2009

Hillel’s Heaven

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

So it happened one day that Hillel left his body and went to Heaven. Hillel looked down from Heaven and saw among the many gathered at his funeral those who had loved him dearly, his immediate family, to those whose lives, in one way or another, had been touched, perhaps through his inspiration or his smile, leaving them a warm feeling in their hearts. It was a big crowd and looking down, Hillel was amazed at how many people he had touched.

There were also many who had showed up to pay their respects who were doing what they thought was the “right” thing to do. “Who are they here for? Their peers? Their community?” Hillel wondered, as they clearly weren’t there for him. Hillel thought that it was sad that these people showed up to his funeral to play sad when they could be at home with their families playing love, something that he deemed of much greater value than making an appearance. He wished for them to discover sooner than later the heart beneath all the posturing.

“…An adored coach, gym teacher, a loving husband, father and grandfather…” Those were the last words that he heard as the funeral scene faded and he shifted his awareness to where he was now, not on earth in a box…but in Heaven.

It looked white and puffy and vast, just like he had heard about in all the tales that he never believed. He was alone and he didn’t have any map or rulebook or instructions on how to go to where he needed to go, like he had relied upon down on earth, but he just placed an intention in his heart and started to walk. And in very little time he found himself approaching a large group of souls who were sitting around an etheric harp where an angel was playing beautiful music.

After a few minutes listening to the angel’s fingers dance along the strings, he thought to himself, “If I have to listen to this for eternity, I am going to be bored stiff!” A moment of doubt crept into him and suddenly he thought that maybe a life in a box was better than a life of eternal harping.

He walked off from the crowd, who seemed entranced and delighted by the angel’s music and found himself to be once again walking alone. He continued to walk and suddenly saw he was approaching another group of souls who were dipping brushes into buckets containing iridescent colored paint and making bold strokes on their blank canvases, as if each soul was her own personal Picasso.

As Hillel entered the crowd, he found a bucket of paint and a stool and a blank canvas in front of him. Examining the paint, it seemed to be the clear color of water and he thought, “Now who do I have to speak to in order to get some colored paint around here?” He sat for a few more minutes, or so he guessed, as time was not quite the same here as on earth, where everything seemed to have a schedule and it seemed like everything on the schedule for today needed to be accomplished yesterday and that you were always chasing behind the schedule, desperately trying to catch up to it, and for most people the “To Do” List only burst into flame and turned to ash when they were finally placed in a box and lowered into the ground.

He asked the man next to him where he could get some colored paint. The man said, “My friend, you are welcome to dip your brush into my bucket and take however much of my sky blue paint as you want. These buckets are magical and the paint never seems to run down or dry.” Hillel thanked the man but, at the moment, sky blue didn’t excite him the way it seemed to excite the man by his side, who was painting in broad strokes as if he were in Heaven. “Oh wait, he is,” thought Hillel. “But so am I and while I am surprised and excited to be able to continue on beyond the capacity of my body, so far this doesn’t feel so ‘Heavenly’ to me.”

Hillel thought that perhaps he could search everyone’s bucket for the color of his desire but there could be millions of people here and that not only was he not sure he would find the color of his choice but he wasn’t sure that if he did he even cared to paint with it. He supposed this was better than sitting idly listening to angel music but was this really his eternity?

Finally Hillel resigned his desire to control the situation and decided that he would decorate his canvas with the clear paint and just imagine that it was his favorite color: a deep grass green. He dove his brush into the bucket and when he passed the bristles of his brush over the blank canvas, in its wake was the very grass green color that he had wanted! He painted some grass, which he used to joke to his children and grandchildren was his only artistic talent, but soon found himself done with painting green grass.

He dove his brush back into the bucket and imagined a golden yellow to add some bright flowers to his field of grass. And golden yellow sprinkled his field and he found himself absorbed in his creation: a grand blue sky…majestic red rock mountains…a quiet green-brown lake with a duck with spots on her tail swimming peacefully, her small ducklings in close formation behind. Hillel realized that it was a mistake to seek to acquire color from anyplace outside of himself.

When he finished his masterpiece he felt something was missing. Without sharing his beauty, what was the point of even creating? He got the attention of the people next to him who looked at his work and smiled and nodded, but still he felt an emptiness, that while they shared his art with their eyes, they were too busy creating their own expressions to really fully dive into the his piece with any depth.

He imagined how his grandchildren would love to play in the thick green grass with the golden yellow flowers under the grand blue sky framed by the majestic red rock mountains and swim in the green-brown lake with the ducks. Suddenly he saw his painting come alive! His grandchildren were running through the grass. The boys were racing each other towards the lake. Two girls were gathering flowers, creating their own bouquets. The other two girls were swimming in the lake, looking like two misfit ducklings as they followed behind the mother duck and her offspring. His creation moved beyond the technical; it was now filled with existence.

Hillel watched the boys and girls play until the sun set down behind the red rock mountains and their parents came to take them home, leaving the picture closer to its original image. He watched the peaceful scene with a calm smile on his face. It was no longer just a frozen picture of nature but now contained the invisible presence of his swirling, playful grandchildren. Hillel felt this peace in his heart and by the time he was ready to move to his next adventure, he left the painting on its rack and took only its essence with him. And it was enough.

As he walked from the group of painters, he entered into the quiet alone space once again. He started to have a sense that time was not measured here with clocks or watches but with events and desires. One didn’t plan by the clock to listen to music now and then paint right afterwards and then—whatever happened next. Nor was one inclined to place them in a linear order in order to make their retelling later that much more simple, “First I listened to some music…and then I painted a canvas…and then…” One just was and what one did just happened.

He thought back to life on earth and how so much—from dinners to theater—was planned out at the start of the day, or at the start of the week or concerning bigger plans, like a vacation, bar mitzvah or wedding, even months or years in advance. One was one big scheduled DO-ing when he was supposed to be a spontaneous BE-ing. Earth had been populated with human BE-ings and yet it seemed to have de-evolved into a planet of human DO-ings. Somewhere along the way the painting took on a coloration that was not designed by the Creator. And while like his own painting it moved from stagnancy into movement, somehow the movement seemed to be gas-guzzling the fuel of Life Force Energy and soon everyone seemed to be moving with purpose but without passion.

He wondered what earth would have been like if everyone didn’t complete their Life Novel on the day that some good-meaning teacher or parent told them that it was time they started taking their life seriously and made some decisions about which direction they would walk and what they would do when they arrived, but instead allowed Life to just happen on its own…to eat when one was done playing and not because the clock said it was 6:00.

Walking alone allowed Hillel the opportunity to reflect on his past incarnation in human form and his current situation in Heaven and to gain a true understanding of Who He Was. The time alone for self-reflection allowed him to assimilate all that he was experiencing on his own, without someone else interpreting it for him and thereby changing it.

But, as if there was a dark cloud looming above, there was an overriding feeling of a lurking gloom, and he wondered whether the sun would ever fully bathe him with its illuminating warmth. His question turned to hopelessness, which turned to fear, and soon the dark cloud blocked all visible light and Hillel could see nothing but only hear the grumblings of the storm it contained. Perhaps out of habit, he started to run but soon realized there was no place to run to where the cloud of his creation would not cover him and so he dropped to his knees and prayed. Well, sort of.

Hillel never believed in God while he was in body and he still wasn’t convinced there was a Divine Creator. All his prayer really consisted of was one phrase: “I want to know!” and that was enough. You see, on earth people think that it is the wording that’s important but, as Hillel was starting to fully understand, the intention was the power that, like the playing grandchildren, turned a dead painting into a living BE-ing.

And then Hillel heard a voice. He wasn’t sure if it was coming from outside of himself or inside, or whether there was even an outside or inside to his Self. He also wasn’t sure if it was a God other than himself or if it was his own inner God that was speaking, or whether there was even a difference. Rather than seeking answers, he dissolved the questions altogether, for he realized these questions would only lead to more questions and would only serve to lead him more distant from true Knowing, from his Self.

His Heaven had started from expectation, taking form from the stories he had heard of angels and harps and music. But this was not where he chose to reside. He was given an opportunity to see through painting that he could create whatever art he would like to see, whether on an etheric canvas or the canvas of his life. He discovered that creating a personal masterpiece comes from filling one’s life with love and not just appointments, activities and obligations. And it was clear to him that his life in body, as well as his life in spirit, was his own—that he was the God of his creation.

He reflected back to his life in body and thought to how many DO-ings he had been involved with that were created by others, whether the imaginary God of Responsibility and Duty, or the equally imaginary God of Need. He reflected that while he did make choices all of his life, that it wasn’t until his later years that he realized what was truly important to him—his family—and how everything else paled in brilliance to the feeling he got when he was with them.

And with that he found himself on what appeared to be an outdoor basketball court, the blacktop heating up under the bright golden sun, which hovered in a clear blue sky. The white lines of the court painted but not perfect…but alas, they were perfect. Looking down at his feet, he saw a basketball that was slightly worn but also perfect in its imperfection.

He bent down and picked it up and started to dribble towards the basket. He did a spin move, pulled up and hit a jump shot from the edge of the key. SWISH!

“Beautiful shot, my son,” he heard from behind him and he snapped around to see his father sitting on the first row of a stand to the side of the court.

“Dad! I can’t believe it’s you!” said Hillel.

“Of course it’s me. I wouldn’t miss my son hitting his first jump shot in Heaven, now, would I?”

And Hillel ran to his father and as he threw his arms around the this man that he thought he’d never have the opportunity to hug again, he felt like a little child in his father’s big arms, even though now they were now both men. Hillel didn’t know how long he hugged his father, as there is no place to be in Heaven but the present.

“Dad, do you want to take me to the rest of the family that’s here?”

“In a minute I’ll take you to the others,” said his father. “What’s the rush? We have all the time in the world for that. Right now my only desire is to watch my son play some ball, something I didn’t make the time to do when I was in body and something that I’ve been wishing to see for what seems like an eternity.”

And with that Hillel realized that in some strange, intricate way, they were all Creators bringing to life their own personal creations and that the only difference between being in Heaven or on earth is that most BE-ings on earth have gotten so caught up in DO-ing and SEEK-ing and WORK-ing that they have forgotten about LIVE-ing and CREATE-ing and just BE-ing; that they are each Gods onto themselves and their creations are their own.

And with that last thought, Hillel released his father’s soft yet strong body and, fueled by the excitement of a child, he ran to the basketball, picked it up, did a few dribble moves, some shoulder fakes and sent up a hook shot that went…SWISH!

“Life happens; it has nothing to do with doing.”

—Osho, Nirvana: the last nightmare (p. 270)

Night of the Cicada

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

Last night I was on my computer, which is on my desk by my aloe vera plant-lined windowsill, when a cicada suddenly came through the window and landed on my desk. This seemed somewhat auspicious to me, as there is a screen on the window and the big 2 ½ “ fly-like bug would have had to have made a maneuver equivalent in skill to the dick through the bottom of the popcorn container from the movie “Diner” to have made it through.

I laughed and with a welcome said, “Hey, brother,” but when I reached to touch him, his sudden loud buzz made me jump like a little schoolgirl who forgot to wear underwear under her skirt as she discovers the pool of blood on the floor by her feet from her first menstruation. [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pnhDl9K49Ks] The cicada buzzed off behind the desk and after a quick glance I thought, “Ah, he can stay. What’s one more freeloader?” as I glanced over at my dog. My dog was not amused.

Soon the cicada started to make his chirping noise and it was unbelievable. It sounded like there were dozens of little Mexicans playing the cucarachas, minus the smell of corn tortillas. How magnificent this cicada played blew me away. The practical side of me then thought, “If he doesn’t shut up when I go to bed I may have to pull out the can of Raid.”

So I was typing away at my computer, enjoying the private show the cicada was providing me, a pleasant change from the private shows I was used to where I had to buy a bottle of champagne for $200 and tip the girl $50 just to rub her thonged ass on my lap for 10-minutes in the back room. He had moved to the standing light and all was beautiful…

That was, until I started to see smoke coming up from the light. I jumped out of my seat and darted to the light switch and turned the light off. I grabbed a wet paper towel and planned to extricate the smoky cicada. He was still alive but one of his wings was half burnt off. I said to him, “What were you thinking—you don’t smoke in an apartment without asking the owner if it is a smoking or non-smoking room!” Seeing the state he was in, I didn’t think he was in the mood for any lectures and so I dropped it and picked him up instead.

Abandon was begging to go out and as any other loving caretaker I told her, “We’ll go when we go,” which left her a bit confused as she thought, “His statement is quite obvious…so why would he make such a statement? Perhaps my human’s not as intelligent as I had given him credit for.” She was justifiably pissed when I told her, “Wait here, I have to take Smokey outside.”

I guided the cicada to the small tree right outside my apartment where Abandon takes multiple pisses each day in a desperate attempt to kill it. With a little prodding he crawled off my finger and onto the branch. He looked kind of sad and I said, “Look, I’d gladly have you stay with us but I don’t think that would be best for you. First of all, I don’t even know what you eat. Leaves? I suppose I could look it up on the Internet and all but…You probably would get annoyed with me telling you to put away your instrument at midnight when you just wanted to play away, no?”

He responded, “If you don’t want me around that’s fine. Just don’t make up some bullshit excuses for it.”

I said, “Okay, I don’t want you around.” I told him I’d check up on him when my I took my dog out later. I asked him why he decided to visit with me and he said he saw me sitting there alone and thought that perhaps I had lost my song, as so many humans seemed to have, and figured if he shared his heart’s song with me that I might remember my own. I smiled and thanked him for his caring and told him that his beautiful song did remind me of my own. With a somewhat serious face he said, “Wouldn’t it be a shame to keep it inside.” I nodded, realizing that he had sacrificed a wing in order to share his song with me.

As I started to walk away, I slowed down and turned around ready to ask one final question. “Up and over,” he said. “That is how I got past the screen. Up and over.” The last puzzle was solved and I thanked him for his beauty and his sharing.

Cryophilia

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

When I got home from my lunchtime client, I figured I’d take Toad and Abandon to Sam Ash Percussion on 48th Street, where Toad could meet my friend Dan (Abandon already knows him quite well) and we could bang on some drums while Abandon would lie on the floor and stare at us with a look that seems to say, “And how exactly is this more fun than walking on the sidewalk and smelling urine?”

Upon opening the door, it was just Abandon who greeted me with wagging tail and I thought Toad was probably taking her afternoon nap, a necessity for her as she stays up each night to the wee hours of the morning, if I could sound a little like the Lucky Charms leprechaun without mentioning “blue diamonds” (as much as I’d like to!)

I like my dog greeting me, because after a few licks and a head rub she knows to fuck off. Humans feel the need to make small talk by asking you banal questions like, “How was your day?” not realizing that the best way to say, “I care” is with a beer and a blowjob and then by silently fucking off.

Toad wasn’t in bed and knowing she is taking a pharmaceutical drug which cures depression—of the pharmaceutical executives who aren’t satisfied with their current pile of money that could buy and sell Portugal—I thought to myself, “If she’s hanging from the shower curtain, I’m going to take Abandon out for a walk, come back and feed her, check my email and then I’ll take her down.” I then thought how she’s been downing a pint of ice-cream each night and the weight from her fatter-than-last-week belly and ass would probably bend the curtain rod and if I ever actually decided to shower, I’d consider that a pretty inconsiderate swan song, in the same vein as blowing yourself up and killing dozens of innocents because you are too ugly and stupid to get laid anywhere but in Muslim Heaven. She wasn’t hanging from the curtain rod and I breathed a sigh of relief, as there was a blue moon that night which meant I was scheduled for a shower.

It wasn’t until spending a half-hour online that I saw her note on the top sheet of the Post-It pad, which said she thought I needed my space and so she went back home—which was several highways, a bridge and a ferry away. I don’t know why one would write a note on a Post-It and just leave it on the pad. I mean, even the name of the product tells you what to do with it after you write on it—“Post-It.” You can stick those bastards anywhere—on the refrigerator, on the computer, on the toilet seat. Frankly, you’ve got to be a lazy son of a bitch to take 30 seconds to write a note on a Post-It and then think to yourself, “I’m just going to leave it on the pad because to have to actually peel it off and POST-IT somewhere is just not worth the effort.”

Was writing her note in consideration…or inconsideration?

People always do something “for your benefit” when they really have no clue what you would consider beneficial. Often they are really quite considerate, the person they are considering being themselves. A month ago, when Toad spent an hour while I was away with a client destroying the sanctity of my apartment [see “Hurricane Toad” http://rebelyogi.com/hurricane-toad], she didn’t consider once that I would never take the time to go through all the boxes of crap that was now polluting my apartment in order to put everything away according to a new system that I wouldn’t read the 400-page manual to figure out and that I would therefore be destined to spend the rest of my days, until moving out of this apartment or dying, hopscotching over piles of crap—feeling much the worse for her effort, thank you very little.

When my Mom bought me a new bathroom set, with a maroon shower curtain with extremely gay tassels, towels that have no fluff but match the aforementioned gay shower curtain and a wooden toilet seat that, while the nicest item of the lot, my ass couldn’t care one way or another when making a deposit what its sitting on, having the same irrelevant look on his cracky face one would give a bank teller who asked him while making a deposit, “Did you notice the new tassels we hung up around the ATM machine?”

One of the biggest, shall we say “challenges,” in a relationship is when one or both—or in the case of Mormons, all seven—parties attempt to capture the other living, breathing, moving body with a still camera, instead of an 8mm—er, High Definition video to you youngin’s. Or in Good Will Hunting terms, “You’re an orphan, right? Do you think I know the first thing about how hard your life has been, how you feel, who you are, because I read Oliver Twist? Does that encapsulate you?”

Think about this: Could one single photograph capture the gist of you? Imagine I took the worst picture you’ve ever taken and spread it far and wide over the Internet and say, “This messy-haired, plumber’s cracked, tub of ice-cream eating, pasta sauce stained shirt-wearing girl is Barbara. Nothing more to say about her.” You would probably try to retaliate by posting far and wide the picture of me from last year sharing crack and blowjobs with Obama.

In the morning I may need space because I am downloading poetry from the Astral Plane. In the afternoon I may want to interact, in the evening I may want to go to a party and when I get home I may want to have some privacy again so that I can reflect on the girl I should have tried to ball at the party with my only accompaniment being a bottle of Baby Oil.

It is a dis-eased mindset that wants to kill and stuff a living person, carry him around all day like a Linus blanket and then sleep with him at night. They call it necrophilia when you bang a dead person. Perhaps there should be a name for sleeping with a person you’ve killed by freezing him in a past time as you carry him with a smile like you would a frosty mug to the keg. Cryophilia?

While some might argue that “people” don’t change, feelings and thoughts certainly do. People change moods all the time; if they are a premenstrual woman, once every 3-minutes. If you get in an argument with someone yesterday, to be mad at her today is freezing them in the icebox of yesterday. In the morning you might wake up all excited and have an abundance of energy and by the afternoon realize that your life has no purpose and all you want to do is lie in bed and Two-Spoon it—one spoon in a pint of ice-cream and one in your ass. Imagine someone knocks on your door at midnight of the same day and says, “Joe, you were so energized this morning, I thought you’d like to go for a 7-mile jog now.” You’d slam the door in his face. If he said he was only thinking of you, you’d beat that idiot silly with both spoons!

Life is unpredictable and requires spontaneity in order to be lived authentically. Maybe you go to a party ready to, in Flintstone’s jargon, “have a gay old time,” and when you get there it’s filled to the brim with fat chicks revealing their thongs and no amount of alcohol will ever be able to wipe that image from your mind. The New-Age yoga poser remains at the party with a fake smile plastered on his face and a feeling of nausea permeating his gut and taunting the back of his throat as he repeatedly vomits into his mouth and swallows it. The authentic, flowing person says, “Later, fatties!” and gets the hell out of there.

Toad acted like a coward and pretended to be a valiant knight. She didn’t even attend the Fat Party, acting all responsible with a lame line like, “I have a lot of homework to do,” while plopping her ass on the couch and watching The L Word all night. I may be a dick; I may even be accused of being an asshole. But I’m definitely not a pussy. I have enough guts to attend Fatty Simcock’s party and leave disgusted rather than making some excuse not to show up because I’m too scared to talk to a woman.

“See, there’s three kinds of people: Dicks, Pussies and Assholes. Pussies think everyone can get along and dicks just want to fuck all the time without thinkin’ it through. But then you’ve got your Assholes, Chuck. And all the Assholes want is to shit all over everything. So Pussies may get mad at dicks once in awhile because…Pussies get fucked by Dicks. But Dicks also fuck Assholes, Chuck. And if they didn’t fuck the Assholes, you know what you’d get? You’d get your Dick and your Pussy all covered in shit!”

—“Team America: World Police”

Beyond The Door

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

(c) August 8, 2009

I woke up in the morning and, as is often the case, the door to the other Planes hadn’t fully closed and through the crack I was able to be a Peeping Tom as I watched her naked beauty. I scrambled under my pillow for my notebook and pen and like an artist staring at a nude model, I started to try and capture the ebb and flow of her intangible curves and spirit onto the stillness of my canvas, an alchemist trying to transmute a raging river into a placid lake. The paintbrush God has given me is my pen and the painting that appears as my artwork comes in the form of words.

Bodies of words…

Landscapes of Words…

Abstracts of Words…

When the door fully closed and I was separated from the other world by a seemingly solid barrier, I inhaled deeply, seeing if I could capture a last whiff of her essence and transmute her fragrance into a few final words. And then she was gone…

I went to my computer and typed in the words I was gifted. Unlike some poets who belabor over a poem for months, I am mostly a Transcriber of Spirit, mindlessly dancing my fingers like a courtroom stenographer. But I am aware that my job is not just for the purpose of paying for my earthly survival needs, only to be forgotten once I leave the court by all but the most academic-minded. I am a Cowboy of Two Worlds, casting my lasso beyond the safety of survival and capturing a taste of the Wild Spirit beyond and pulling it—sometimes bucking and rearing—as it kicks over the art stand and brings its untamed beauty beyond the boundaries of my canvas to help unsettle the heavy, dense, dirt until it sparkles down like the glitter of Fairy Dust.

Unlike the taxidermist’s mountings, there is still life in my bounty. My hunting is not that of a killer, taking pleasure in snuffing out the life of another creature. I don’t use a hook to pull fish out of the ocean for you to fire and sauce and decorate in order for you to hide the taste and smell of death. I cup my hands and grab a handful of water in which to splash your face, letting the salty taste of life salivate your taste buds, washing your eyes of the despair that has made it so that all you can see is dullness. Like a drug addict, I can only think of my next fix of adrenalin rushing through my veins with the next captured beast. And often my eyes, too, have adjusted to the point where I can’t see that everything—even the darkest nights—have bright jewels sparkling among the blackness.

Sometimes I think about sticking my foot in the cracked door and prying myself through to the other side, watching the door close on the world I used to see as vibrant but now only see as dull. Perhaps I can break the hinge and the door will collapse and whenever I get dirty with darkness, I will always be able to bathe myself clean with light.

The critics say, “Just let your eyes adjust to the dark and you’ll get used to it.” I don’t want to ever let them adjust. Then I may forget altogether what my eyes have seen beyond the door and all my art will be dark and dreary.

Morning Breath

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

(c) August 6, 2009

The eyes blink open
But the body remains closed
to movement
…motionless
requesting a few last minutes of rest
Before being asked to carry me
From place to place
Like a chauffer

The head feels heavy
The cloudiness of the hypnogog
…lingering
A puff of smoke
Hovering like a ghost
Before the wind of the day
disperses it in a million directions

The alarm clock sits by the bed
But time has not yet resumed ticking
from my nightly travels
devoid of body
to places of pictures, sounds and sensations
The only movement
The second hand on the clock
Which remains waiting for me
In the Waking State

Without intention or forethought or decision
A sudden deep breath
Bellows the lungs
Filling them like a gas tank at the pump
And with it I am sucked
Into the world of
Matter and movement
…and time

The legs stretch down
The arms stretch above
The body opens up
Creating more space
As the breath of time
Rushes into the vacuum
Filling every nook and cranny
With its hurry

And now my implanted Soul
Impregnates this body’s womb
And is ready to be carried around
Like imprisoned royalty
In a world that it doesn’t call Home

The silent ticking of time
Starts once again
Keeping me on pace
Like a metronome
In a world that is constantly running
As the sands of time slips through its fingers

I wonder how many more mornings
I will be pulled back
To what feels like a workday
By the morning breath
Until I am allowed to vacation permanently
In timelessness

I hurry to write these words down
…small trinkets from a place that feels distant
Before the doorway to Home
Closes completely
And I am forced to breathe the amnesiatic fluid
Of this world contained in the belly of
Time, Space and Delusion
And I forget Who I Am
And from where I come
…feeling disconnected and alone once again
wondering if I’ll ever feel like I belong here

I Had A Dream…

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

my girl

my girl

I woke up this morning body shaking and in tears, similar to how I feel when I hear Martin Luther King’s “I Have A Dream” speech, only instead of being hopeful that one day even a black man could become President if he smokes enough crack and blows the right people, my tears felt more ones of anguish, as if I were tied to a couch and forced to watch the whole season of “Sex in the City.”

…My family and I were just leaving a foreign country, someplace somewhat “militant Hispanic,” as there were a lot of guys with moustaches wearing khaki and smoking cigars as “La Cucaracha” played on the soundtrack. As we went to the airport, which seemed to be on a dirt field with a lot of checkpoints by angry señors, we encountered a problem.

I had left my dog, Abandon, back in storage and wanted to go back for her. My father popped an annoyed face and said, “We’re just going to leave her,” and at that point I knew I hated him and always would. They started loading onto the plane and in a panic I turned around and ran back for my beloved four-legged companion.

When I got to where she was being stored, the storage security guy, who seemed like a stereotypical lazy Mexican, said that Abandon was in the plastic container over there and that he hadn’t seen her move in forever, the implication being that she was dead. I lifted the lid of the airtight container thinking, “It’s not rocket science, Paco, you put an animal in an airtight container and it’s gonna suffocate to death.”

Abandon was motionless in a light green goop that looked like a sticky Jell-O, with only her head above the surface. The only thing missing was Bill Cosby doing a commercial for it. “Lime green Jell-O brand gelatin. Even with dog waste, there’s always room for Jell-O.”

I pulled her out of the container and slowly she started to move and then she did one of those full-body dog shakes and shook off all the green goop. I was thrilled. My girl!”

She struggled as Paco used his years of expertise as a cigar roller to help me to roll her into a paper so that I could smuggle her on the airplane, suspecting that in this Bizarro world of dreamtime, while a vat of Jell-O containing a dead dog may be okay to transport internationally, a live dog may not be given the same traveling rights. I was outside the plane with my “rolled up package”…

…when I woke up. I was curled in a fetal position and crying as deeply as when I found out that Rosie O’Donnell was taken off the female dating market when she publicly announced that she was gay. I remember the tremendous pain of that moment and the one thought that kept me from total emotional collapse: that at least she had the balls to be honest about her sexuality, unlike Tom Cruise.

What did this dream have to tell me? That I hate my father? That I should cancel my scheduled trip to Cuba? That similar to Rosie O’Donnell’s vagina, Tom Cruise is a gay pussy?

Perhaps it showed me that I am not totally free from attachment, that along with the concepts of “Truth” and “Justice” that my little Abandon is one of my last holder-oners, gripping me like little balls of toilet paper in a hairy ass crack.

I got out of bed and saw my little girl curled in a ball, motionless on the ground. Looking closer I could see her body rising and falling slowly with each breath she took. I kneeled down beside her and kissed her on her head and got a mouthful of hair, as she is shedding something fierce at this time.

I reflected on the last five years we’ve spent together, kind of like one of those cheesy montages in a T.V. series…when I went back to the shelter to take her home…when she first tentatively climbed the one flight of stairs up to my apartment, probably the first set of stairs she ever negotiated…giving her beets and pineapple tops to chew on…feeding her fresh food twice every day and having to clean up after her whether he poo is solid or runny…her starting fights in the dog run and park because another dog wanted to chew on her stick or play with her ball…explaining to the attacked dog’s caretaker that a dog can live a full and productive life with just one ear…killing rats, squirrels, birds, hamsters and small cats at her whimsy…chewing to pieces many of my valuable books and electronics…dog hair adding itself to every home-prepared meal I ever make…

Perhaps a trip to Cuba isn’t the worst idea after all!

The Blue Pill

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

“This is your last chance; after this there is no turning back. You take the blue pill, the story ends, you wake up in your bed and believe whatever you want to believe. You take the red pill, you stay in Wonderland and I show you how deep the rabbit hole goes.”

—Morpheus to Neo from “The Matrix”

I had an epiphany last night. It wasn’t the usual kind of inspiration I get which involves wearing my underwear inside out in order to get an extra few days of wear before a gag reflex from not only everyone around me but myself as well forces me to finally surrender them to the laundry. Once I realized the magnitude of what I had come to understand, I felt a tremendous load lifted off my shoulders and slept peacefully, not giving a second thought to the problems of mankind. It was similar to that amazing scene in “Good Will Hunting” on the park bench where Robin Williams said to Matt Damon how something occurred to him and he fell into a deep peaceful sleep and hadn’t thought about him since, that Ben Affleck was just dead weight and Matt needed to dump his sorry ass like Affleck had dumped J.Lo if he ever wanted to do anything more than straight-to-video B-rate stinkers.

[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qM-gZintWDc]

Years ago I had a hint of my great revelation when I opened a yoga class with the pivotal question from the movie “The Matrix”:

“If you had the choice of taking the red pill, which would take you out of the Matrix, or the blue pill, which would keep you embedded in the Matrix, which would you choose?”

I wasn’t prepared for the first response, which came from one of my semi-regular students—but enough about her bowels.

“I’m pregnant with my first child. I like my job…life is going pretty well for me—I’d take the blue pill.”

I was stunned. It was as if I had been arranging for us slaves to finally escape from the plantation and the night of the break the other slaves said, “Tonight’s meatloaf night—we’re out.” And as if that wasn’t bad enough, then they started to try and convince me that an occasional beating and a little name calling wasn’t the worst thin in the world, when I was at the point that if I heard one more white piece of shit use the word “nigger” again I was going to go postal, which in those days meant trampling him with the Pony Express.

What I’ve come to realize is that most people don’t want to wake up from the Matrix. They’re happy to be living their dream life, even if it’s a nightmare.

“Dude, I gotta score me some acid,” said Rufus. His friend Reggie couldn’t understand this.

“Every time you do acid you have a bad trip. Last time you saw devil heads and I had to hold you for two hours until you stopped screaming. The time before that you got so nauseous you threw up all over yourself. The time before that you ripped off all your clothes, shouting that ‘killer ants’ were eating you alive and then you proceeded to run down the block naked and ended up spending the night in a jail cell. After all that, why would you want to do another hit of acid?”

Rufus smiled and said, “At least I’d be high.”

In Judaism and Christianity there’s The Ten Commandments—“Don’t kill anyone, don’t steal from anyone and keep your dick out of your neighbor’s wife.”

In yoga there’s the Yamas—“Don’t harm, don’t lie, don’t steal, and keep your dick out of everyone” (brahmacharya or “celibacy”). 97% of yoga teachers teach nothing more than a low-impact aerobics class. 2% spit out a few Sanskrit terms they managed to memorize and on occasion mention some yogic principles but will avoid any discussion of brahmacharya because it sounds retarded even to them, so instead they play the “selective orthodoxy” method of “Thou shall not kill, that shall not steal—but if the neighbor’s wife is really hot then it’s okay to fuck her.” I belong to the 1% elite of yoga instructors who became a teacher for no other reason than to molest their students.

In Buddhism there’s talk about non-violence and compassion.

I have to side with the Moslems on this one: You have more of a chance of waking up from the nightmare by pulling a jihad and blowing yourself up into a million pieces, even if you are moronic enough to ruin it all by claiming it to be “God’s” will yet you’ll only do it if you are promised some pussy in your drunken, whoring Islamo-Heaven.

All these supposed ethical principles—even Islamic chopping a woman’s arm off if she bears it in public or killing a woman for disgracing her family if she was raped, probably also in the name of your made-up, sadistic “God”—have ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with waking up. They just help a society continue to run along with business as usual while still allowing everyone to live in the nightmare undisturbed. They are like taking a course in lucid dreaming, helping one to stay aware and in control of their dreams while in the midst of them—regardless of whether you now have flying dreams or dreams where you’re wealthy and surrounded by a dozen swimsuit models, you’re still lying there unconscious in your bed.

Ay, but here’s the rub: What I call a “nightmare,” most see as “The American Dream”—or the Hindu dream, or the Buddhist dream or, with the addition of some heavy-duty explosives, the Moslem dream.

A variation to the Taoist Chang Tzu’s famous saying:

“I had a dream that I was a butterfly. When I woke up, I was not sure whether I was awake and seeing that everyone else was asleep or still asleep and dreaming that I myself was awake.”

What really sealed the deal for me happened during my midnight call with Toad last night when I was taking a breath between one of my long and venomous rants against her taking an antidepressant drug, when she asked me, “Why does it bother you so much?”

When you push your dogma on someone else who is not interested in hearing it, you come across as annoying as one of those Jesus freaks who share with you how their “personal relationship” with Jesus changed their life when if given the choice you would rather they just shared with you the AIDS instead. I just have difficulty understanding how anyone could not see the light, praise Jesus, and realize that living without this Truth coursing through your veins is living a lie, Christ be with you.

I’m reminded one veteran actor’s answer to a question posed to him by that fruity James Lipton of “The Actors Studio” and the lesser-known tea family. He was asked if he had any advice to young actors starting in “the business.” He answered, “Don’t.” and I thought this famous, successful actor was a prick and should take his own advice and get out himself. It took me finally getting fed up with “The Human Stage” to fully appreciate his advice.

To stay with the acting simile but switching things up a little…

It’s as if you’re on stage performing with a repertory group where you are playing Shakespeare tonight and tomorrow you get to play a hippie from the 60s and the day after that you will play a Knight of the Round Table, each night receiving thunderous applause and standing ovations for playing your role so well … Finally you just want to be the “you” behind all the different costumes and masks and make-up and you know if you step even one more time on the stage you will not be able to stop screaming, which will probably fuck up everyone else’s good time performing. So you say, “I’m out.” … And none of the other actors can understand why you would leave a fake life as a somebody with fame and fortune who plays around wearing tights and tie-dye and chain mail for the authentic life of a nameless, jobless nobody … And the newspaper reporters and your fans, who are just actors without a proper stage but with their own private audiences, ask you the same question … And the only answer that remotely comes close to a response to their question is, “It’s fake and I don’t have a choice.” … And you try to convince some of the actors that you have no idea what life outside of the theater may entail but that they should drop all that they have spent their whole lives creating for the slim chance that it may just be better, something that even you doubt to be the case … And when you see the confusion on the faces of the Lead Players, you turn to the Bit Players, figuring maybe they will risk their shitty breadcrumb-scavenging careers for the chance of something—if not better, then at least different. And they look at you as if you’re nuts and you finally realize that you are nuts, for they have a choice and you don’t and if you had a choice you wouldn’t leave the stage either … But you don’t have a choice. And therein lies the disconnect.

I’m not sure what lies beyond the stage door. I don’t know if Truth or Love is waiting there to take me to an exclusive club where only VIPs are allowed entrance or whether Fear and Loneliness will lead me down a dark alley and mug me and leave me lying face down in garbage and rat shit, scared and alone. All I do know is that you can shove the blue pill up your ass.

“It means buckle up your seatbelt, Dorothy, because Kansas is going bye-bye.”

—Cypher from “The Matrix”