The Quiet Kind of Extravagance

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[Come to accept the idea of a future that is exploring us and we can give ourselves, again and again, the possibility of remembering the future.   L. Berio.]

 

I once knew a sniper with a pink teddy bear tattoo on his left arm.   He told me he and every other Marine in his unit got the same one.  It was intended to provoke smart-ass comments, which is to say it was intended to provoke violence.   

When we met he was out of the military and no longer left targets in a lifeless crumple beneath a pink mist. He still killed animals, of all persuasions, and found it a moral imperative to eat as much of what he killed as possible.  Once the sniper feted me with bear stew, simmered in mushrooms and red-wine sauce.  It gave me claustrophobic dreams, like I had to dig myself out of a collapsed cave.    

I never saw him fight – never saw him drink either.   He told me he had to quit both or else end up dead.  In the winter we would stack square bales on a wheelbarrow and walk out to the pasture to disperse it in piles for the horses.  Without fail he stacked two seventy-pound bales in his right hand and a third in his left. 

Sometimes he needed a warm body to help with a project.  I remember one time he held a piece of four-inch polyurethane plumbing that was plugged full of human shit, while I took a Dewalt cordless sawz-all and sliced through it, expecting each moment to splatter us both with excrement.  That didn’t happen.  We patched in a new section, with ample amounts of diaphanous violet epoxy glue – enough to leave me cross-eyed.  The rich people whose shit had plugged the pipe complained about the smell.  We hated them, each for our own reasons, but we got paid in full.  I came away from the experience with a newly-felt but abiding sense of limitation. 

Where id was, ego shall be. 

 

Ontological precarity

Yes, yes, yes, all is suffering. We know. We read that book, too. We ratified the notion, acknowledged what it warrants. A quorum was present and everything.

And it’s not as if we don’t know the answer to the question: where to begin? Right here, right now, as each beat of a heart carries us forward in its staccato murmuring.

But how ? How to begin? So much depends on no ideas but in things, so much of the ballet between self-awareness and acknowledgment of consensual reality takes place off-stage.

That’s probably as good as it gets, the most that can be hoped for. The lash - yes, yes, yes, we welcome it, clear-eyed and with gratitude. That’s how.