Today
I felt the negativity wash over me
and everything I have never wanted
surged and overwhelmed,
engulfing me in such a wave that
I knew I would have to swim much
harder to reach the distant shore.
Today
I felt the negativity wash over me
and everything I have never wanted
surged and overwhelmed,
engulfing me in such a wave that
I knew I would have to swim much
harder to reach the distant shore.
When you were young, you played with your friends and used your imagination, dreaming of a better world–even if that world was just for you.
You didn’t think about Us versus Them, and you didn’t hope to grow up to hate and fear, your eyes glued to a small screen, fingers scrolling endlessly through bad news into worse news.
When you were young, the World was wide and Forever meant something. You didn’t think about bills and hardships. In all likelihood, you didn’t worry about your health, or stress about paying bills. If your family wasn’t perfect, you still loved them, and maybe you even spent some time together.
Sitting in front of a computer screen, watching, reading, and absorbing years of negative energy was not a goal.
When you were young, you didn’t think you would log into a program and willingly pass your days letting the thoughts and actions of others affect You–the product and creation of your parents, imperfections notwithstanding, a Being capable of shaping your own desires and pursuing them. You did not dream of denying others happiness. You might even have thought about how you might bring joy to others.
Now the days pass, and the moments in which you catch a glimpse of your former Self, you do not recognize or remember that World.
I do.
You were born for more. It is time to remember.
when the cycle goes long enough
you will be around to watch
the rebuilding after the disassembly
and
if you pay attention this time
you can see the organization
the substructure
the arrangement
and you can decide if this time
is the time that you will actually do something
to make it work
or if you prefer to just watch
the entire thing happen again
and again
A busy few months and then (suddenly) spring
Had a long talk with a friend tonight
After one of those madcap days that was over as soon as it began
And sitting there long after the others had cleared out
The conversation veered toward deeper things
As is customary such nights
We shared a few stories and grinned at some
But shook our heads at others and sighed
It was clear (to both of us)
That this was the best it had been in quite some time (on many levels)
And that would normally be cause for celebration
But not everybody in our circles sees it that way
Which is one of the great mysteries in life
Let alone mid-adulthood (after many tough lessons learned)
So it was off to bed to see how the sun would greet us the next day
On the drive home I felt again how happiness is a choice (after a point)
And we should all be lucky enough to reach that fork
(I hope some of the others feel that too)
we drove huddled together in a VW hatchback
to see your arms flail rhythmically to synthesized music
in a former church outside Detroit
and there wasn’t a doubt that you were doing exactly
what you were supposed to when
you let your art wash over you
even the less-inclined could not resist your happiness
when you let the light in
and years later I still think about how much the rest of us
might feel if we could but just open the valves
and remember what imagination and love
for what moves us feels like
So, in March I retire officially from scheduled shifts, making anytime I work “guest appearances.” It sounds good–I like it, people smirk. All good.
Tonight: magic hour, 6 pm. Universal din-din time. Not bad. Crew is solid 3 out of 4, old-school dynamics in play, lots of synergy. Media and pop-culture references a’plenty. Time passes quickly. Job #1 wears me out, as nobody realizes that (most of us) we are all in it to help people. Thus, all efforts post-Job #1 should be filed under “extraordinary effort,” although it does not count for anything.
Then: eight o’clock, the final power hour. Easy orders. Easy smiles. A half-hour in, a couple comes in. They’re into each other, best-friend style, and it’s refreshing. Automatically, it’s Ashley and me by association.
Guy: youngish, semi-afro, REI shirt. Girl: tech gear, Pacific-Islander look. Neither are Yinzers, and it’s obvious. They order a local beer and a double IPA, split a sandwich, and I think, “This is not the normal run of things.”
I get distracted by a few orders, then, after craning my neck for a better view of the parking lot, I ask Dana what beer they ordered. Parked slightly out of view out front is a maroon first-generation MDX, loaded for adventure. Bike tires peer out from the rear hatch, while a massive, overstuffed soft luggage bag strapped up top partially obscures a surfboard. The rear suspension sags under the weight of their cargo, and I realize that this is no ordinary road trip.
I place two beer bottles in a 6-lb bag, and write “Happy Trails!” in the middle as I tape it shut. I wait a little more than ten minutes for the couple to pack up, and then I walk around the corner and smile, placing the bag in front of them, saying sincerely, “I noticed your MDX is ready for adventure, and I can’t wait for mine to be. Good luck, and happy trails.”
Guy: (genuine, deep smile) “Aw, thanks, man! That’s really nice of you. We’re halfway there.”
Me: “I hope your adventures are everything they should be. Best of luck!”
They threw away their trash, smiled warmly and waved as they left. I watched them back out, then smiled at the gentle rocking of the Acura’s suspension as they drove out of the plaza parking lot.
I thought about how every (single) day is another chance at happiness.
I thought a lot about what I might
Think at such milestones, but just
Like every other marker, it came and
Went, with takeaways: Arrive,
Experience, Learn, Evolve.
A shame, how long
…it’s a difficult Sunday when I have more than ten tabs open
and multiple social media applications are telling me which clothes are the best and which
models are the prettiest and most handsome and which shoes will make me feel better
about my life while at the same time my mind reminds me that last night’s flurries and
this week’s projected high temperatures herald the disappearance of a winter barely felt
only to usher in a spring full of To-Do Lists and a general anxiety that suggests all is not
well–not well at all–and the neurons firing more rapidly than an M41A Pulse Rifle in
synapses deeper than the Mariana Trench between my hemispheres and I’m
remembering seeing a Lamborghini when I was seven years old seated in the back seat
with my older cousin
who swore it was a “Fiarri” and I had to correct him. This is happening at the same time
that Asahi makes me wonder if it is, in fact, Japan’s No. 1 Beer, and I think about which
snow cone flavors are the best after you ride your BMX to a local pool or arcade. Politicians
are on TV talking about their dick size, heroin and crystal meth are in apartments in
neighborhoods where ice-cream truck soundtracks used to ring when parents were close
to the end of their workday. All of this, and my User Progress is incrementally creeping up
in an online class that will serve as a functional fractional effort to boost my meager salary
which will become wholly unnecessary the moment I sell this house which I can afford
solely through the willpower to work multiple jobs in a town that is not mine in a
community that does not want progress in a state that consistently ranks in the bottom
ten percent of anything that is ranked by magazines in an area of the country that was
once a Captain of Industry. I am left wondering what happened to imagination and being
unnaturally naturally happy and thinking about the next cool thing to do while reading
books or watching movies and spending time with people that made you feel good and
how that is not necessarily a thing when you are an adult. It is at this point in time that I
push this particular train through the tunnel and see how many of you will read it and
think about the last time you
…standing there for a second, unsure of what to do. The light refused to show him, which did not quite make sense. His shoulder shifted, and part of the empty parking lot behind him was obscured. He took a long sip, and sighed deeply. “Now,” he growled. “I’ve been around a long, long time. Watching. And I never could understand why people keep doing things they don’t like doing.”
“That’s how a lot of misery is spread in this world.”
Are you investing in joy? Are you spending your time cultivating pain?