Weekly Plunder: Week 14 - Tornados

The weather has been apocalyptic lately.

I woke up Friday morning to a St. Louis that was blanketed by an opaque fog that rendered the city grey and misty.

Tornados and severe storms swarmed the city later that night. Wind ripped sheets of rain sideways in steady violent pulses.

That night I dreamed myself in a small Italian village based in a mountain pass, perhaps the Basilicata. Winding marble stairways sheened under the sun and wove upward through the village along the mountain pass’s edge. The village had layers of shops and restaurants, all connected by these marble stairwells.

I climbed up the main stairwell, hoping to reach the top, stopping occasionally to view people eating gelato or sipping wine. Why couldn’t I stop and join them?

Upward still I climbed, the village narrowing as elevation rose. But each time I thought I reached the top I’d look up to see another level of the village above me. There was no end in sight, and it seemed the climb upward would last forever. Why was I climbing? I had to have the best view, I told myself.

It seems a fitting metaphor for life. I’m glad I remember that dream.

What I’m Watching: Hellbound on Netflix. A pretty weird and thought provoking Korean show that explores religion, belief, and societal control.

What I’m Reading: From Paycheck to Purpose by Ken Coleman. As I transition away from a lifestyle driven by paychecks, I find it worthwhile to have some guidance from those who walked a similar path in the past.

What I’m Listening to: Monochrome” by Between the Buried and Me. This is an interesting song without a genre and I suspect it will mean something different to everyone, so I won’t reveal what it means to me.

What I’m Doing: I start physical therapy next week. The ankle is getting there. I jumped for the first time in four months this week, and I successfully completed a one minute run. I’m happy that I ran again before 2021 closed its window forever.

What I’m thinking: I’m thinking about that dream and the “chase to the top”. Is the pursuit worthwhile when knowing full-well that the chase has no end? Or it it better to stop, take a seat, and have some gelato in that quaint little Italian village?

Speaking with Ghosts

This morning I stepped outside my apartment building for my morning walk and noted there was a light drizzle. It was the type that you can’t see; you can only feel the tiny beads of water by walking into them. I had my umbrella but decided it wasn’t worth the effort to unfurl it.

A heavy mist hung in the air and shrouded the downtown building tops. Sudden and intermittent gusts of wind blew the drizzly precipitation into me. It was bracing.

I thought about the looming work emails and virtual meetings and time spent inert, starting at a screen, and suddenly I’d had enough. There had to be a Neverland somewhere.

I decided to speak with a ghost, so I closed my eyes as I approached the downtown library.

When my eyes opened I noted the sky was streaked with reds, oranges, and violets, and the sun hung low on the horizon. I looked around and noted that I was in Las Cruces, New Mexico. The Organ Mountains jutted up and stabbed the sky in the east with their rocky dagger-like tops.

I was near Echo Canyon Road, looking down at a dried-up tributary, an offshoot of the Rio Grande River. The sandy bottom was surrounded with two steep and rocky slopes that led up to the neighborhood street. Everything down there at the bottom was dust and sand, dead.

8-year-old me was at the bottom, running around in random zigzags and talking to himself, throwing rocks into the air and watching them fall. He was dead too. A ghost.

In spite of my ankle I maneuvered down the vertiginous slope to the bottom. Scree slid beneath my feet a few times. The granite rocks here are sharp, I thought, sharper than I remembered from my childhood. Better be careful.

The ghost eyed me with a skeptical glance and kept his distance. I kept my distance too.

“Who are you?” He asked.

“I’m you.”

”That’s impossible. I’ll never grow up.”

“You do,” I replied. “In fact you already have. You’re a ghost now. History.”

The ghost’s eyes widened.

“If I grow up, do I still read comic books when I’m a grown up?”

“No,” I said. “For a long time you don’t read anything. You lose the ability like everyone else. Instead of reading you worry about looking young and buying shit. You will read again eventually, but not comics.”

“I don’t want to read anymore?”

“Instead you stare at computer screens. You check emails. You compare yourself to other people. You worry about money and do chores you don’t want to because you’re told it’s the way to be successful.”

“Maybe I’ll get bitten by a vampire soon so that won’t happen. I’ll be forever and you’ll be the ghost!”

“You won’t. You’re a ghost because our history is written.”

“Let’s change it.”

“I haven’t figured out how. I’ll let you know if I do.”

“That sucks.” The ghost threw a rock with all his might at the horizon. “Maybe I’ll walk to the horizon then. See if there are any creatures there.”

“There aren’t,” I said. “You’ll wander another ten minutes, then get tired and turn back home. I remember this day too.”

”Then maybe I’ll catch some scorpions and tarantulas!”

I smiled. “Yeah,” I said. “You’ll catch a lot of those.”

I checked my phone. It had no signal.

“What’s that?” The ghost asked.

“It’s one of the many deaths of us,” I said.

“So when do I die?”

“August 25, 1994. 1 pm.”

“Pacific Standard Time?”

“No, Eastern. You were born in Florida.”

“That’s right,” the ghost said. “We should hurry to the horizon. La Llorona haunts the river at night. She likes to drag little boys and girls into the water.”

“Yeah”, I said. “I forgot about her.” I cracked a smile.

“Is she the one that kills me?”

“No. She’s one of the things that keeps you alive.”

“Do I end up being an astronaut?”

“No.”

“A professional athlete?”

“Sort of. But for many years you become another one of those soulless adults who whines about their hair and clothes and worries about being late and paying bills and looking good for couples photos.”

The ghost laughed.

“Screw that,” he said.

“Yeah, screw that,” I said.

“Let’s get going,” the ghost said. “I want to see if there’s gold at the horizon. Maybe there’s a leprechaun too.”

“My ankle isn’t so good and I’ve been that way before,” I said. “I’m gonna head up this hill before it gets dark. But enjoy.”

And suddenly the ghost darted toward the horizon, staying within the depths of that dried up river valley, deftly maneuvering the rocks and underbrush to avoid scrapes.

I clambered back up the slope and to the city street. I took a deep breath. The sun would set soon, and La Llorona would emerge from the Rio Grande to drag another child into its icy night waters.

Tumbleweed bounced and rolled down the road, pushed by a steady eastern wind. Pushed from the Organ Mountains, that strange rocky terrain where trolls lived and clubbed human trespassers to death.

How do I get back to the adult world? I wondered. Then it hit me: I didn’t want to.

I looked at the horizon ahead, the path that the ghost took to get to it. At that point where the sky met the earth, something glinted.

Maybe it was gold after all.

I started walking that direction, though I kept to the pavement.

The Weekly Plunder: Week 2

Funny how our judgment of colors, particularly the judgment of their beauty, can change with the seasons. Orange and yellow are suddenly more alluring, whereas spring violets and sapphires are more jarring and out of place. It’s the season of pumpkin carving and corn harvesting. Leaves are more beautiful when they decay.

What I’m watching: Season 3 of What We Do in the Shadows. Hilarious!

What I’m reading: Full Throttle by Joe Hill. Dark Carousel is a personal favorite from the collection. It gave me Something Wicked This Way Comes vibes (the dark carnival with the haunted carousel that turns kids into the elderly as they spin around).

What I’m listening to: “Trains” by Porcupine Tree

What I’m doing: rehabilitating my ankle. Every attempt forward is followed by another setback. I’m a long way from healing, unfortunately. But with my inertia I’ve found more room to think.

Torn Asunder: The Weekly Plunder

Fall hits gradually, but winter hits abruptly. Winter imposes itself on the Midwest like a sudden switchback on a long desert highway. It shows abruptly, having long-been hiding behind shimmering mirages.

What I’m doing: In my reenactment of the protagonist’s mission from the Stephen King novel Duma Key, I am attempting to walk a little farther each day (rehabbing a busted ankle=slow and tedious, like your typical Oscar winner, badabing). Today I managed to walk around my apartment building three times, which felt like a minor triumph. On Sunday I’m going to attempt an early morning swim. It’ll be my first swim in about a year.

On the minimalism front I sold a decent weight of clothes this week, not so much in a quest for less as from a standpoint of, “I bought this more out of vanity than for function.” “Stuff” is fine so long as it’s functional. It’s when we get obsessed with upgrades that it becomes dangerous. And of course, an expensive bicycle causes more pain when stolen or crashed than a stripped-down bicycle does. An expensive wardrobe is just more money lost in the event of a flood. The newness of it all stales, like all things. Take things in moderation. Enjoy cool stuff but don’t let materialism sink its fangs into you.

What I’m watching: Movies mostly suck these days but I’ll watch the James Wan film Malignant tonight. Wan directed The Conjuring and Insidious, both of which I found to be effectively suspenseful. Check my Reviews page in the upcoming days for a deep dive.

What I’m reading: Born to Run was a magnificent and inspiring novel. I can’t wait to run again. Now I’m on Full Throttle, a collection of short stories from Stephen King’s son, Joe Hill. Hill is a masterful storyteller in his own right. I’d say it runs in the family but I think it’s more a matter of picking up good habits from one’s immediate surroundings.

What I’m listening to:The Parchment” by Iron Maiden off their new album Senjutsu. This one showcases the master storytellers at the top of their game. Kick back and let this one take you places.

The Nothing

“Beware the barrenness of a busy life.” - Socrates

I had a fun conversation this week with a colleague about the 80’s film The Neverending Story. In the days that followed I found myself thinking about the evil that threatened to destroy the magical world of Fantasia, “The Nothing.”

The Nothing was tied to the human world. In the film it resembled a black hole that swallowed and essentially deleted from existence all of the mystical lands and creatures of Fantasia. It was directly correlated with the adult lack of imagination and failure to dream or read books.

With the film having been released decades ago and the book it’s based on long before that, I wonder if The Nothing would have easily triumphed over Fantasia in today’s world. I suspect it would.

I recalled a friend of mine’s toddler who sat in the back seat while we drove to a museum, the toddler’s eyes glued to her tablet screen. How will such a toddler, always enveloped by dopamine-inducing stimulus, ever have time to imagine? It is through boredom that creativity grows. It seems that The Nothing now swallows many of us before we are even old enough to read in the first place.

The Nothing makes us busy, and in its clutter it makes us barren. With more websites to browse, more things to buy, more emails to answer, more shows to watch, more tasks to complete, The Nothing envelopes us in inadequacy. And at the core of this inadequacy is money. Therefore, money is at the core of The Nothing.

The toddler therefore abandons nature in favor of WiFi.

On the other end of the age spectrum is the retiree. Consumed with planning, the 65-year-old retiree is concerned almost entirely with projections. Projections of lifespan, projections of benefits, projections of health. All of these projections gravitate around money.

Whereas they once fretted for their job security and bonuses, retirees soon fret for health security. The primary question of the consumerist model does not fully disappear: Do I have enough?

Gone are simple days spent being. With money having consumed the retiree’s every thought, every worry, and every bit of motivation, for years upon years, the modern consumerist model has completely devoured the retiree’s spirit. Wholly dependent on the system for what the retiree now values most, which is predictability and stability, the retiree no longer focuses so much on what he or she deems trivial: things like creation and meditation. What money, what insurance, after all, are supplied by creativity? Instead, the retiree’s focus is on wills, on healthcare, and on potential future nursing homes.

Burn me at the stake, I say, before sending me to a damned nursing home!

Free from the shackles of work, the retiree is shackled to insurance and rife with anxiety over pension plans. “Will I get my promotion” is quickly placed with, “But will it get me through?”

The what ifs of the working world subside, and the what ifs of the healthcare world infect.

It is no wonder then that so many retirees struggle to find purpose, when in fact there is a thousand years’ worth of purpose in a single ray of sunshine. The retiree’s sole focus for so many decades was on “finally having security” that the act of retirement only breeds more insecurity: a lack of passion, a renewed anxiety over wellbeing, and a focus solely on money.

The retiree, consumed by being busy, struggles to breathe. He or she will therefore often find new things to be busy over, and there is great risk in these things being too superficial to live long for.

The focus for so many decades was on having enough money that money can become the retiree’s primary value. It will not simply dissipate because one is retired. It will instead shapeshift into forms more sinister. The Nothing will prevail.

And in between the toddler that is introduced to a consumerist model of screens, and the retiree fully consumed by the consumerist model of funeral planning and pension spending, are those lost in between, navigating the unknown, figuring out what is truly valuable to them.

Will The Nothing finish them off, or will they learn to read again?

It is easy to be rendered cynical by the hoard, but it is still relatively easy to defeat The Nothing.

Take a moment to breathe. Do nothing, just stare and breathe. Let your mind wander where it may. Don’t look at any screens or the wasteful notifications that blink from them. Don’t prepare anything or mark anything or clean anything or throw anything away. Was it easy? Then do the same, but for ten minutes. Then try an hour. Look at a plant, or an animal. Let your mind wander. Then when you’re done, pick up a book and read a few pages.

The Nothing just shrank a bit.

The Still Point of the Turning World

T.S. Eliot referred to the act of reading as “The still point of the turning world.”

Finding such moments of stillness seems crucial to sanity, now more than ever.

With the advent of clockwork came the creation of anticipation, and with anticipation inevitably came anxiety. Yet time as we know it today is a relatively recent phenomenon in relation to the span of human history.

The first mechanical clock was likely invited some time in the 14th century. Portable clocks, or pocket watches, arrived much later, in the 1700s. So while clocks entrenched a spot in societal life only over the last several hundred years, humans have existed for over 200,000 years.

Before clocks, we evolved to sense time as something that ebbs and flows, like the rise and fall of the sun.

With clocks came a march toward “progress”, something that could only be tangible if we had “markers” and “goals” to anticipate.

Now there are such time markers everywhere. Beeps on phones serving as reminders of looming appointments and peers to call. Blings on computers reminding of upcoming work meetings and due dates. Deadlines on projects. Metrics on spreadsheets marking durations of tasks to push employees in the assembly line faster, for the sake of “efficiency.”

Where can modern people find stillness?

Alarms pull the languished out of bed so that they can rush and “hit a calorie count” on a gym machine, which has a set duration that counts down to an end time, after which that person must rush to work. Hurry, or your exercise time gets reduced! Even time outside of work is spent hurrying to get to work.

Phones remind us at lunch that our eating time must be brief. We have appointments, and tasks, and deficiencies to address!

The constant tick of the modern mind has never been louder, and I have never more ardently sought stillness to counter it.

I do not exercise with a phone on me. I bike and run without one to get lost in the moment and appreciate the elements, and how they interact with me and the world around me. “End time” be damned.

I try to hide screens when I read. Reading is a rare opportunity for absolute focus and meditation, and time does not need to exist while in this state of mind. I don’t want schedules and reminders distracting me from my chance to push time aside.

I hand write these blogs first, then type them later. I don’t want a sense of urgency in a rare opportunity to reflect.

The march forward creates a longing for more and uses a tool called time to hammer feelings of incompleteness into the minds of the masses. It is this sense of urgency that turns a state of peace into a state of longing. Clocks are now tattooed into our upbringing and we justify the need for them by fooling ourselves into thinking we need more. We become obsessed with addition. More screens, more material stuff, more upgrades, more responsibilities, more promotions, more emails, more phone reminders, more bills, more Xanax, and more work hours.

It feels so damn good to just hit the pause button on it all.