“This
is a power play!” Alice hissed.
Margie
turned her head and looked at her friend. “Oh come on Al, you’re
being paranoid.” She recapped the bottle of bourbon and picked up
her drink from the kitchen counter. “You know George, he’s as
dumb as a post sometimes, he just got the dates mixed up.”
Alice
took a sip of her tequila sunrise and glared at her longtime friend.
“Why are you taking his side? This is going to cost me a big bonus
and Alex is sure to pass me over for that new promotion coming up.”
Margie
sighed. “Al, he just got the dates mixed up; he apologized, and he
told Alex it was all his fault, what else can he do?” C'mon, drop
it and lets get back to this crap.” Margie grabbed her friend’s
arm and pulled her toward the great room door. “Jesus, I hate these
company things. So do me a favor and don’t make things worse, okay
Al?”
Alice
seethed inside but let herself be pulled along by her friend.
***************************
When
I moved to Maine, one of the many things I did in an unknowing
attempt to start to find my way out of isolation, was to sign up for
a continuing education writing course. A course, I participated in, off and on, for about a year. Once, the professor gave the homework
assignment to write on the topic of “Who am I?” This assignment
was intended to stimulate we students into thinking about how we see
ourselves, how we think
about ourselves and how we portray ourselves to ourselves, and to the
world. At least that is what the meaning of the words written on the
blackboard had transmuted into after several days of sitting on the
back burner of this old brain.
At
first, I found myself unable to write anything on this topic. Nothing
was coming easily. I could describe myself in terms of roles,
physicality, careers, etc. but it felt false for me to do so. I
simply no longer think of myself as a permanent entity, even from
moment to moment. This is a far cry from where I began in early
childhood, when I fell prey to the notion each of us exists as a
single, unique, isolated individual, who which, though while
modifiable around the edges, is in fact, essentially an unalterable,
permanent something. Now while this is true on one level, life has
taught me that it is utterly false on another and that my greatest
mistake has been in adhering to the sanctity of the notion of
permanence. This mistake has led to living much of my life in
discomfort of some sort or another. It has taken me almost 60 years
to understand that I am literally not one Karen with all kinds of
different attributes, but am in fact, a multitude of karens, each
with its own conglomeration of beingness. Each of these unique karens
comes out of a greater amorphous essence when called into being by
passing moments filled with all their varying stimuli, both internal
and external. So when I began to think about this assignment I found
myself doing a lot of dithering. Finally, I simply closed my eyes and
waited. Eventually I saw a woodland dirt path stretching out in front
of me, bordered on both sides by tufts of tender green grass and
splashes here and there of white trillium. This was the right image,
for these days, I most identify with journeyer, one who travels by
foot through all terrains, some chosen and others not. When I think
of my life, and by extension all life, I see forest, meadow and big
city streets, each with their multitude of paths or sidewalks. There
is always the one on which I currently traverse while others cut away
from it to disappear behind trees or buildings, and as I follow them
as far as I can with my eye, I always think about Robert Frost and
his 2 roads diverging in a yellow wood.
The
Road Not Taken
BY
ROBERT FROST
Two
roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And
sorry I could not travel both
And
be one traveler, long I stood
And
looked down one as far as I could
To
where it bent in the undergrowth;
Then
took the other, as just as fair,
And
having perhaps the better claim,
Because
it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though
as for that the passing there
Had
worn them really about the same,
And
both that morning equally lay
In
leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh,
I kept the first for another day!
Yet
knowing how way leads on to way,
I
doubted if I should ever come back.
I
shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere
ages and ages hence:
Two
roads diverged in a wood, and I—
I
took the one less traveled by,
And
that has made all the difference.
These
images of paths not taken, at times, call forth regretful karen,
complete with heavy salt tears, but just as often, the same images
will bring out joyful karen with her buoyant spirit. Yet these karens
are not but a moment, and in just a few steps further down this same
path, a wood thrush may begin his aria, and regretful karen may morph
into hushed, awe-filled karen, or a car may pass, blaring rap, and
joyful karen may transmute into melancholy karen. I have no control
over these changes as I have none over the overtaking sorrow which
came one day when I came across a deer carcass rotting in a field;
killed only for its rack, which had been removed to hang on a would
be hunters wall. I even have no control over the changes wrought by
writing the last sentence, which brings angry, frustrated karen
elbowing in to look at these words with these eyes. Change, change,
change. Ever flowing, ever transforming into new configurations, none
of which are permanent. But we think they could be, or at least I
did, and so I spent a lifetime looking for a way to hold onto happy
karen, or at second best, find the permanent content self to ride
above all the others. Well, it ain’t gonna happen anymore than a
tornado can blow forever or than a leaf can remain forever green upon
the tree. Our states, our selves, come into being when conditions
come right and then dissipate back into the ground of being when not.
So what to do? What am I to do when karens full of pain, sorrow or
rage coalesce? They hurt and I don’t want them around.
The
only answer I have found so far, I found walking. One day, on a trail
in the middle of nowhere, on the side of a mountain high above tree
line, I got caught in a ferocious thunderstorm. Lightening struck
frequently and so close to me. I could smell ozone. Winds threatened
to tear me off my precarious granite perch and send me whirling away
to crash on the ground far below, and when hail began to pelt down,
making already tricky footing even more perilous, a matching storm
inside of fear, anger, hurry, awe, etc. became as uncontrollable as
the one buffeting me about from the outside. There was no quick way
to get down out of my situation. It was what it was, and would be,
until it wasn’t anymore; and worst of all, I had no say about any
of it….. something I finally understood deep in my bones in
that moment, out there on that trail. Life just is.
In the past, in
more normal types of stormy life circumstances, I had always thought
that there must be something I could do to alter whatever was going
on around me, or in me, …..or both. But in that moment, in this
storm, clinging to this mountainside, a sense of utter powerlessness
sunk in, accompanied by a laughter producing knowing, that power, is
only illusion. Peace descended. I was still scared, but now I was
connected with wind, rain and hail….. and all
my-selves. We would exist together as we were for as long as was
given us; storm blowing, me being afraid, trying to find a way down to tree cover, then at some point we would change, Nature into one of her
other morphs and me into another of mine. It
would still take me a few more years to really begin to get it, that people (including myself), are just nature too.
Thanks!
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