Sunday, June 14, 2009

The Plan


Summer is here.

I have a new house.

I have a new life... sorta.

Okay, I have the possibility to live a new life, but I guess I get that every day don't I... Hmm...

Right, so I have a new location to live in which gives me the emotional motivation to live my life differently.Sure, that's close enough to truth. ANYWAY

I have a huge reading list for the summer, but currently I'm working on the following:

Isaiah
Tobit
Matthew
Purity of Heart Is To Will One Thing
Two Hellblazer Comics
The Goon: Noir
The Brothers Karamosov
And that's it for now.

Also, I'm gonna start taking guitar lessons from a friend who's staying in town over summer. So... yes, the summer is promising. Also, anyone who reads this, don't worry, I will get back to philosphical meandering, just not today.

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Roommate Gone

Yesterday, my roommate went home for summer. I won't see him till next January, possibly not for multiple years, depending on what he decides to do for school. This is weird.

While we were hanging out for the last time, I kept saying to myself beautiful wave, beautiful wave, just let it go. But, that's a lot easier to write about on a semi-anonymous blog than actually put in practice.

I was doing okay all day yesterday, getting ready for my last final, helping my girl move, trying to de-stress. Then, I tried to sleep. That was funny.

For some reason, I have a really hard time sleeping alone. Not alone as in alone in my bed, but alone in my room. In this half-gutted state, my room has lost any essence of home to me. There were nights when my roommate was gone and I slept just fine, but I slept surrounded by his and my stuff. Now... that stuff is all gone. Not that there was anything special about the stuff, but it's like his presence has left.

Before, whenever he would go anywhere, his stuff was a constant reminder that I didn't live alone. That I would never find myself alone in my room, with nothing to do, and no-one to see. No matter how withdrawn or mean or stressed I got, he would eventually be around, even if neither of us had any choice in the matter.

But now, the room is bare. The cinder block walls and the pre-stained carpeting are completely devoid of any character or warmth. Three months from now, somebody will unlock that door and see this room as a blank canvass. But to me, right now, this room is the last muddy pieces of a beautiful wave as it is pulled, at the speed of time, back into the ocean. Leaving behind wet sand and the terrifying expectation of the next wave.

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Beautiful Waves


I've let the fact that my little piece of autobiographical fiction is now free for any scary person on the scary internets to peruse, judge, and dislike sink in for just about an hour and a half.

I think I'm okay.

I'm ready to say something new now.


I'd like to explain the title of this blog.

This summer, I was spent a weekend with mom's family camping on the Oregon coast, which, as anyone whose ever been on the Oregon coast knows, means camping with salty air and the ocean as soundtrack. Nobody really "plays" in the Pacific ocean anywhere further north than San Francisco.

The only thing that makes the Oregon coast worth visiting is the view. The place is beautiful. You can sit on the beach and just listen and watch the seagulls. Once there was a group of whales breaching just beyond the breakers and we passed around binoculars.

Last summer was especially... disruptive to the status quo of my life. I broke up with my girlfriend of two years, who I had given a ring. I spent nearly two months of the summer abroad, and alone, trying to be useful. And, my sophomore year of college was just about to start.

I was sitting on the beach thinking about how much had changed since the last year when I'd camped here with my family. My Dad has a saying, "in five years, a lot of things change, but in ten years, everything changes." I was pondering that phrase. Really, dad? Everything.

I sat there, gazing out into the fog, trying to find the exact point where the ocean and the sky blended together, and a thought came to me. The ocean is constant. The ocean doesn't change. It's probably the most constant thing on the planet. Continents shift. Layers of the sky can be destroyed. People, animals, and plants are all in constant cycles of birth, life, and death. The ocean is the only thing that hasn't changed throughout all that.

Tides have always come in, and they have always gone back out. Then I realized that the most constant thing about the ocean was it's change. It's a bored cliche, but the only constant is change. For the ocean, this change takes the form of waves.

Each wave is different, unlike any other. Some of them come rushing at the coastline, pounding the sand with full force, sending water particles flying into the air. Some waves lap against shore, caressing the wet sand like you'd pet a butterfly. Every wave is a unique interaction between water molecules and land, propelled by a force far beyond anyone's control.

You already know where I'm going with this. Each wave is like each moment in life. Every moment comes and goes, followed by another. There's nothing we can do to keep the next moment from coming, and we can't keep a moment past its time any better than we could keep a wave from returning to the ocean.

The temporary aspect of the wave is part of what makes it so beautiful.

I have been guilty of trying to keep waves on the shore far past their time. I have been guilty of this many times. Often with little waves with small consequences, but sometime, especially recently, with a big wave. I'm tired of doing that.

I am trying to live by a new philosophy. One where I recognize a beautiful wave, revel in the temporal wonder of the moment, and then allow the moment to dissolve and slip into the past. I'm not going to kill myself trying to keep old waves on the shore, and I'm not going to mourn their passing.

My life is full of beautiful waves, and my goal is to see them for what they truly are, without fear, and let them wash over and through me.

Testing the Waters

So... I'm gonna see how I feel about publishing something I've written on this thing. I wrote this just over a month ago, it's fairly unedited, and were I to ever do something serious with it, I would probably review it a few more times.

Anyhow, here it is:


She had been dead for 2 months before I cried for her. It wasn’t that I was too shocked to mourn, and I’m not some kind of cold-hearted bastard, I was just too busy. School had just started, I was still trying to get my footing in Seattle, and then, she was gone. Midterms are not canceled just because an 80 year old woman in Oregon dies. I went back for the funeral, and then I went on with my life.

Two months later, my world had stopped spinning. I was back home for winter break, and it was cold. Everything was cold. My parents were in the middle of rebuilding half of our home, which meant that there were lots of cracks in the insulation, and the cold was beginning to get in. We would keep the fire burning hot all day. Since she died, and we were the only other ones in the family with a fireplace, we had more than enough firewood. Most of the time, we huddled together in the living room/kitchen and tried to keep one another sane. Sometimes we talked about her.

A few weeks before Christmas, I took a walk. I don’t know why. It was cold. Damn cold. I was wearing four layers of shirt under my coat, a hat, and two pairs of socks. Have you ever noticed that we never bundle up our legs? Nobody owns snow pants in the Pacific Northwest. We wear jeans all the time, when we go skiing we wear long-johns under our jeans.

I walked the three blocks down to her house. Nobody was there, but I knew where the key was. She lived next door to her son, my grandpa, and I was praying to God almighty that he would be at church. He was.

Inside, the place was in a weird state of gutting. She was a pack-rat, lots of those children of the depression turned out to be pack-rats. They never threw things out. My family had inherited, besides the fire-wood, a majority of her food reserves. Most of which was from pre 1980 and contained dairy.

The garage shelves were bare, something I’d never seen in my entire life. I got into the house proper as soon as possible, it was cold out there.

It was cold in there too. I don’t know why I assumed it would be warm inside a dead woman’s house. The pictures were all gone, as well as most of the useful kitchen items, but most of the books, and nick nacks were still there. The better furniture had been removed, the TVs were all gone. I sat down on one of the couches, and looked around the room.

Years of after-church afternoons flooded back to me. Evenings so hot that you’d sleep on the cold tile floor in the kitchen. Bowls upon bowls of taco soup and broccoli. And always her, sitting in the chair, doling out equal amounts of wisdom and bitterness, sometimes I wasn’t sure which was which with her.

She’d been sick for a long time, but she didn’t really take care of herself. She liked sweets, and she liked CMT and she liked to read. The cocktails of prescriptions had started to take a toll on her mind, and sometimes she forgot.

I saw her a few times after she’d gone to the hospital, after they had her on morphine and not much else, when lucidity was improbable. But, I don’t count those. The last time I really saw her was the day before I went away to school. She must’ve known that something was going to happen, she must have known something. She told me that she had a gift for me. She went into her bedroom and she came out with an old bible. It was a leather bound, black thing with her name monogrammed on the front.

It had been her bible for a very long time. It had been damaged by smoke during the fire before my father was born. It’s especially obvious in the back, where all the maps are. The pages are browned and crinkle they way near-burnt paper only can. I pick it up sometimes and smell it. It still smells like her house. It may be the only thing in the world that does.

It was damn cold, and sitting with nothing but the wheels in your head moving isn’t a good way to keep warm. I walked through the rooms of the half-empty house for the last time, and I stepped out onto the back porch. The still-green stump of the old pear tree was sticking out of the ground in her back yard. She loved that tree, and it was at least as old as she was. Every year it would drop pears on the ground like a slothful piƱata, one every few minutes or so. She would can the pears, or just eat them raw, and we would help her.

Not a week after she died, her son, my grandpa, cut down the pear tree. I don’t know why. I don’t want to know why.

The night before I left for school, I had a dream. Well, I had a lot of dreams that night, but I forgot all of them but this one. I was in a transition between dreams. One dream was ending and another was beginning to fade into my sleeping. I felt someone say, pay attention, this is important. Then, I found myself standing at the edge of a clearing in the middle of a mountain valley. The sun was just on its way to setting. The field was filled with tall grass that swayed in a gentle breeze.

There were people, standing, sitting, laying down; in groups of three or four, or alone. None were moving, they weren’t frozen, they just weren’t going anywhere. They wore 30’s era clothing, jean suspenders and flannel shirts. There were some trucks and tractors, also 30’s, laying around in the field. They weren’t broken down, but the grass around them wasn’t depressed. It was like they’d just been left there, they weren’t necessary anymore.

One of the women stood out. She was about 30 years old, and she stood alone in the field. She had brown hair, and she was wearing a dress with yellow flowers on it. The breeze picked up for a moment, and she raised her arms out to her side. With the wind tugging at the hem of her dress, she closed her eyes and smiled.

I walked the three blocks back to my house, thinking about her. Thinking about all of it. Thinking about the half gutted house. Thinking about the pear tree that died with her. Thinking about the Bible that was sitting on my shelf at school. Thinking about my dream. I saw her, standing in the field, yellow flower dress billowing lightly, as the cool evening turned into a warm night. I saw her holding me when I was newborn. I saw her watch my dad so that his parents could work. I saw her sacrifice for her children when their father died at 35. I saw her, and I knew that I wouldn’t see her anymore.

I cried for her.

Friday, June 5, 2009

Okay, so I started a blog

Will I often use this blog?

Probably not.


Will anyone I know read this blog?

Dear God, I hope not.


Will anyone on the internet read this blog?

Again, probably not.


So, why did I start a blog? The simple answer is that I often find myself sitting at my computer wanting to vent some emotion and not finding an adequate outlet for it. I have a hard time getting it out in ms word or something similar, so here I am. I guess it just helps me when I feel like I have an audience. Even if that audience doesn't really exist.

I will probably do a post sometime tonight after I finish my homework.

I don't know if this is really that good of an idea, but, here's hoping, right?


Ezekiel D.