What you feel is life, what you live is another story.

Tag: life (Page 1 of 2)

There is a thing…

There is a thing, but it is just a thing. It’s one of many things which are like drops of water that have combined to flow as a river. Still this is a big thing.

Yet aren’t they all big things? Every toe stub, every fall, every tear that falls seems to be a big thing in the moment of their arrival. We focus on the droplet and bitch about its temperature as if it is the only droplet in the river. It is the thing after all, the very thing we’ve been dreading and the very thing we’ve tried to avoid.

Damn, I’ve been so stupid. I’ve spend so much of my life so focused on the droplet that I’ve failed to see the river. So much time has been focused on the wounds that I’ve missed the healthy parts. What the hell have I been doing? Wasting my time with fools and frailty has caused me to sacrifice the only thing that has ever truly mattered.

No, for now on I’ll revel in the soreness just as I bask in the comfort. The sadness will be let go just as the joy will be. I will swim and laugh and enjoy the river and honor each and every drop as equal parts of the same stream. I will fucking love it all, even the parts I detest the most.

Ultimately there is a thing and we all have it in common. We live and in that life we will die. What we do with the thing is our choice, and how we do it is our power.

Yeah, I love this thing.

The Hand of Love

I thought I heard her in my ear,
“My love, relax for I am here,”
But alas I woke and knew it wrong,
For there was nothing but the Siren’s song.

The minute my feet found the floor,
I turned to where she was before,
The devil laughed and then he spoke,
“She was gone before your heart awoke.”

Lost once where oceans know,
The mountains, that’s where I must go,
Her notes I find where Sirens dwell,
The valleys can bring pain as well.

Do not trust what Siren’s sing,
Or the feeling that their song shall bring,
Steer your ship away from shore,
Or find her death as those before.

Instead head up and touch the sky,
Watch the birds as they fly by,
Hold the one that wants you near,
Forget the rest who disappear.

Then when the final curtain’s drawn,
And your sands of time are nearly gone,
The hand you hold you’re worthy of,
The hand you hold is that of love.

The Winter is Coming (A Poem)

Winds announce the coming freeze,
There is a rustling among the trees,
Their leaves now old, about to fall,
Will always answer nature’s call.

Man now grown, forgot the sound,
Tone deaf to life around,
Nothing more than a fearful child,
Ignoring calls to walk the wild.

Yet he who came to Nature’s breast,
Would love the fierce, ignore the rest,
When Winter comes his footprints know,
He was born to leave them in the snow.

The Autumn seeks to end his youth,
Turn what was young to aged truth,
Still he rises to walk some more,
And forget the path he’s walked before.

Alone he’ll sleep under the stars,
Dream of love that’s healed his scars,
He’ll love the places still in pain,
And know his Soul in Autumn rain.

It was in the Autumn he saw the end,
As Winter waited around the bend,
But now he smiles at what he sees,
For he’s just a leaf among the trees.

~Tom Grasso (25 Sept 2020)

A Memorial Day with Grandpop

Yesterday was Memorial Day here in these United States. It’s a time set aside to remember our fallen soldiers, many of whom died to protect our freedoms. For me though, it was a day to wake up with memories of my Grandfather, a career soldier(Army MP) who fought two wars for his country.

My Grandfather was not a perfect man by any stretch. Yet I decided long ago to remember the man I knew and not the man whose imperfections fit the narratives of others. As a boy, I had very few special humans around and he was one of them. I am quite content to remember him that way. It is, I believe, his blood coursing through my veins as well as his spirit that has helped me survive this life thus far.

I woke up later than usual, greeted by the sounds of birds outside an open bedroom window that leaked the early morning sunshine into my space. I love sleeping with the windows open. The Colorado nights are cool, and the waking to the sounds of the nature I love only reminds me that this life, and this day, are perfect. I was born to live, and live I shall.

Gas lines

In that waking moment, I remembered my Grandfather. I don’t remember Memorial Day being anything special to him, at least not outwardly. He rarely talked about his time in the Army, and never about war, save to put certain things into perspective. I can remember, during the Oil Embargo of the late 1970’s, such a moment.

I had asked him about the hassle with lines at the gas pumps. Our nation was rationing gas due to the severe shortage, with days you could buy gas decided by the last number on your vehicle license plate. Needless to say, this created very long lines at the pumps, and a lot of turmoil in our society.

“Tommy (he called me Tommy), I survived the Great Depression and two wars. Waiting in line for gas is nothing. At least we’re not waiting to be fed.”

Ah, perspective. He always taught me perspective and he always seemed to get me thinking. This was no different. In both our time together and in my memory of him he was always there to make a point.

“Quit the whining and put the damned things on.”

After a meditation and a shower, I checked social media. I do that in part because I have friends I care about and because I just can’t stop looking at the train wreck that is my society. One of the first things I saw was another endless debate about masks and about the right not to wear one.

I could hear my Grandfather sigh that heavy sigh of his. It was a sigh often accompanied by a shaking of his head. I could then see him look up over his eyeglasses at me.

“Tommy, being a patriot is not about waving a flag or showing up at a parade. It’s about serving your country. It’s about living an ideal, a system of honor. Wear a mask if it has a chance of protecting someone else. Just quit the whining and put the damned thing on.”

He wasn’t much for whining. He, and most in his generation, just survived. They fought, they worked and they took care of each other. In fact, he once said to my shock and disapproval that neighborhoods should not be integrated.

“What? Why?” I asked with a tinge of disappointment.

“Because, you need to know who you can count on. How I grew up, Germans could count on other Germans. Irishmen could count on other Irishmen. The main reason the military wears a uniform is so we know who we can count on. Look at the Amish. They don’t whine and complain if their barn burns down. They all just get up, get together and rebuild the damned thing.”

He then continued in my memory.

“In fact, you should be so busy doing things that you’re too out of breath to talk, let alone whine.”

I could learn a thing or two from him still.

Time to get moving

In that early morning dialog, I decided to hold my Grandfather special the entire day. I wanted to remember him by living in a way that both utilized and honored his place in my life. I would, as he would have done, do so quietly and without much fanfare. Fanfare was not his thing.

Unfortunately, most of my life my Grandfather was sick. He smoked 3-4 packs of unfiltered Pall Malls a day and had the compulsory emphysema to prove it. He started smoking them when he was a young man in the Army, back when Big Tobacco told the world how healthy it was to smoke.

There was never a time in my memory that my Grandfather did not struggle to breathe. Yet, we did all kinds of things together. He, my Grandmother and I would go fishing off the coast and in the bays of New Jersey quite often. He would teach me all kinds of knots that I would quickly forget. It wasn’t about the knots that excited me. It was about the moments with my Grandfather.

It didn’t take long, though, for the COPD to worsen and his abilities to do things declined to the point where he could only walk a few feet while holding on to something. This was a silent lesson that taught me I would never smoke cigarettes. Ever. It’s a promise I’ve never broken.

There were so many times I wanted to do something with the man. Play baseball (he loved the Yankees). Just go for a walk. I wanted him to take me places and show me things because we both enjoyed doing them. He couldn’t, though, and I knew it so I never asked and never complained. I was just happy to sit at the kitchen table with him and my Grandmother while they did crosswords or played Yahtzee. Sometimes I would play with them and look up things in their crossword dictionary. It was always fun for me.

Even in my Grandfather’s poor state of health he was teaching me something. He was teaching me the value of breath and the value of movement. As I get older I want to move. I want to challenge myself and I don’t want to be in that place my Grandfather was, relegated to playing Yahtzee instead of hiking, doing Crosswords instead of playing with my children.

I forgot that lesson once, and it nearly killed me. I won’t forget it again.

Still, more…

Another lesson my Grandfather taught me in his ill health was the spirit of never quitting. He never asked for help, never complained (to us, but I’m sure my Grandmother knew every ache the man had), and he never stopped doing what he could. It would take him sometimes 30 minutes, but he would walk up a flight of stairs. It might take him a lot longer than it normally would, but he would make his breakfast. He did what he could and sometimes that seemed miraculous.

Doing what you could seemed to be his life’s mission. It’s one I’ve adopted to some measure, although I’m not sure to his level. I’m not trying to get to his level because, after all, that would doing all he could. Not all I could.

Back in the present day, my partner and I decided it was a good day for a hike. On the hour drive to the trail, I thought about the rides I’d have with my Grandfather. He would never go faster than 35 miles per hour, and I could remember my embarrassment as people would honk while yelling vile things at the old man. He didn’t care. I think he understood their vitriol even if he cared less about it.

When we got to the trail, I couldn’t wait to get going. It takes my injured brain time to reorient itself on uneven and steep terrain, but I channel my Grandfather both in his unwillingness to quit and his being fine with taking it slow. Sometimes I need to bear crawl down slopes until my brain feels comfortable in my footing. Once I get going, however, I don’t want to stop. I feel like Forrest Gump once his leg braces fall off. I want to keep going, and going, and going, fully realizing the blessing I have in being able to still do what I want to do.

My desire to keep going isn’t just about be able to still do what I want to do. It’s also about knowing how fragile the string holding this all together is, and that all things must end. While the string is strong I want to swing from it. When it breaks, I don’t want to think I’ve wasted any time it had to offer. That’s a lesson I learned from Grandpop.

The Universe still gives me just enough of a limitation to appreciate the moment when that limitation is overcome. It’s a reminder that drives me, just like it must have driven my Grandfather to keep walking though short of breath and to keep coming home when others said death was imminent. The two of us have places we want to go, things we want to see, and we want to be the only thing that stops us. It’s that part of him that lives in me. That part of us that refuses to die.

It was a great hike, my limitations blending into certain triumphs and those triumphs blossoming into realizations that I am the power behind the life I want to live. I’m not sure how many can fully understand that wisdom.

The Day of Remembrance

We all are different people doing our thing. The ghosts we carry with us will often determine our limitations and our views on the world.

As the day fell into night, my body sore from the hike and my mind swirling in the memories both shared now and kept personal within, I had little to do but smile. I could see in my mind those moments when my Grandmother had reached her limit with my Grandfather’s stubbornness. He was a stubborn man and while she had learned to let him do his things, there would be times when she couldn’t contain herself.

How would one know what that limit had been reached? She’d say three words.

“Now Pop, stop.”

Poetic as they seem, there were not meant to be trivialized. He would invariably stop, knowing full well it took much for her to get there. That would be it. He would do something that finally set her off, she’d say “Now Pop, stop” and give him a look. Nothing more would be said.

He was a man with his way and didn’t suffer fools who tried to interfere. Yet my Grandmother was no fool. She would not interfere unless he asked her to, or when she had had enough of his “foolishness”. I would laugh (and am laughing now in the memory) because my Grandfather would not cower to any man but my Grandmother could shut him down with three words.

Likely, because, she rarely used them. They would spend their life together constantly and never argue. He could watch his shows while she crocheted, or he could read his paper while she hogged the TV. They would sit in the same space, sometimes doing different things together until it was time for them to do their crosswords or play Yahtzee. In their earlier years, it was likely “let’s do our own thing, but do it together. Then we’ll fish, or walk, or whatever.”

They had learned to live separately, together. My Grandfather could be playing solitaire while my Grandmother read the Reader’s Digest or the TV Guide, sitting at the same table, separate but together. Doing “my” thing didn’t mean doing it “without you” unless, of course, it had to.

That’s something that yesterday’s Day of Remembrance showed me. I can’t really remember my Grandfather without remembering my Grandmother. I had moments with him, special moments, that usually meant moments with her. She wasn’t a boisterous woman by any stretch, but she was a powerful woman indeed. They were both forces of nature indeed, quiet in their disposition but loud in their presence.

For each fisherman’s knot he tried to teach me, she was there to make sure he taught me correctly. For each “man’s lesson” he offered me, she was there to remind me that I was a person unto myself. She had quit smoking decades before I was born because, after all, she was the smart one. She had made sure the meals they were cooking together were healthy because she wanted him around as long as he could be. She was the one who reminded him that he had no limitations and that he had something special to walk to, even when walking seemed impossible. 

She did so without words, knowing all she had to do was sit there, and he would come.

At the end of the day, I gave that much thought until I fell asleep. I never remember any lectures between them. There were never any arguments behind closed doors I overheard. There were two people, individuals but in it together, and when their barns burned down they didn’t argue about who did what or whose fault it was. They, instead, rolled up their sleeves and raised the barn again.

I was dozing when the thought struck me. I wondered how much they had argued in their youth. I wondered how long it too them to set their boundaries and truly get to know each other. Perhaps war and the prospect of death sped up their process? I don’t know that answer but one thing seemed certain.

The older they grew together the stronger their bond had gotten. I’m certain when the knowledge that their time together was drawing to a close much of what they thought was important became trivial. They focused on what mattered. Living life separately but together until the moments when it was time to play. Doing things they could do, and not caring much about those things they couldn’t.

That made this past Memorial Day a special one for me.

 

My Certain Truth (A Poem)

I know,
Through the veils and wails of yesterday,
A certain truth.
That in the end,
Even if I leave this place surrounded by a crowd,
I will walk away alone.
Not burdened by the weight of painful diatribe,
Or solemn oaths broken by uncertainty,
Or the windless flight of angels helplessly tethered to the ground.
 
No, I will walk away alone.
Perhaps, though, the winds that carry me will be of a certain heart,
The one who’s placed her hand upon my chest,
Who has gazed lovingly beyond the curtain I place before my eyes.
Maybe, as a stroke of fate, or luck, or of a story written by the Divine,
A man so blessed as me,
Will know the wind of love that lifts me off the my earthen home.
 
I shall fly away alone,
My wings born from those I love and have left behind,
Those I’ve seen born into this world,
Who have turned a mere boy into a man,
Who gave him pause to find himself,
And the strength to carry on beyond the wounds he thought he owned.
 
They may forget me, but I will be unforgotten,
I will exist in their tears and in their laughs,
In their challenges and in the their triumphs.
When their own wings are born they will remember me again,
And they will pay homage to me not just when they fall,
But when they stand again,
And when it is their turn to fly,
When they touch love’s sky for the first time,
I will be there waiting.
 
I am but a man, anonymous to most but well-known to the gods who gave me life.
Born a liver and a lover, a sinner and a saint,
Perfect in my flaws and built to rise above my ashes.
Yet I am nothing without a certain truth.
One recited in the chills I find when she touches those parts of me built to touch her back.
One shouted to the heavens when my children call my name,
The name only they are free to call me.
“Dad”.
 
When all is said and done,
When my wings take me to a place I am not yet certain does exist,
I can only hope I’ve given more than I’ve received,
That my best was good enough to see me pass through the eye of a needle,
And that those who give me the wind to fly away,
Know they are
My certain truth.
 
~TG

If only I had listened…

Here’s what I can say to those who are protesting public health measures put in place to protect our economy, our people and our community. I say it in love since that is, right now, all I have to offer. No data will convince you. No science will sway you. Perhaps love is the way to your salvation.

Right now, you feel fine. It’s easy to protest things that oppose your ideas of freedom, of capitalism, and of ideology. It’s always easy to adhere to a principle when it’s not being challenged. It’s easy to be strong when you don’t really need to be.

Perhaps soon, your recklessness will catch up with you. You may feel a tickle in your throat or an ache in your body. “It’s no big deal,” you will say to yourself. You may, if you are one who can admit making a mistake, put yourself in quarantine to protect those you love or you may continue your recklessness and ensure those around you that “it’s no big deal.”

Perhaps that cough and ache get worse, and maybe your fever starts to spike. You’ve felt this before, it’s no big deal. You’ve always recovered in the past with some antibiotics and rest. You call your doctor, who says you are showing signs of coronavirus. He says quarantine at home. He tells you that there is no treatment, that antibiotics don’t work with this virus. You’ll just have to ride it out and hope it doesn’t get worse.

And no, there is no test that they can give you. You aren’t sick enough to warrant a test.

That angers you. You have the right to know what you have. Ah, they remind you, this is a serious pandemic, and everything has changed. There are just not nearly enough tests to go around. Sorry, but you aren’t rich enough, famous enough, or athletic enough to warrant being bumped to the front of the line. Athletes, CEOs and celebrities are being tested. You? You’re just an average American who must be near death to be given a test.

Still, you’re the brave one. Invincible, you might believe. It’s all going to be OK.

Then, perhaps, it gets hard to breathe as your fever spikes. You can’t seem to catch your breath. Few things scare people like not being able to breathe, and here you are, the bravery beginning to falter, the invincibility beginning to wane. The feverish chills course through your body as your panic increases. If only you had been smarter…

You miss your family. They are not able to come see you. If you die, you will die alone. There will be no memorial, no chance at good-byes, no final moments you share. Your final moments were spent convincing others of your bravery while convincing yourself of your invincibility. Now, the illusion is gone as you face your own mortality.

If only I had listened…

Have I infected my children? My spouse? My friends? Time will tell if you are the one they point to as a reason for their suffering, their loss, their pain. Perhaps you all will learn a lesson. If it is not too late.

You wonder how you are going to pay for all this care you are receiving. Will your family be bankrupt as a result of your illness? How will they survive if you do not? How will they survive even if you do?

It’s gotten so hard to breathe. The doctors, all bundled up in their protective gear, come to tell you the bad news. You will need a ventilator to live. They will sedate you, put you in a drug-induced coma, so that you don’t gag on the tube they are about to put down your throat. You want to be strong and brave again, but all you can do is look around you. Is this the last thing you will ever see?

I want to touch my children, tell them how much I love them. I want one last kiss with my spouse…

Those things will have to wait, and as you quickly fade asleep you wonder if they’ll ever come.

If only I had listened….

Much More Than #24

Kobe Bryant. A star athlete. A hero to many. A legend.

I don’t want to get into the minutia of hero worship or the frailties of a boy made rich and famous before manhood. There are many challenges we all face as we mature, but few of us have to do so under the spotlight. Even fewer of us have to do so under the intense pressure of performing for wealth and adoration. We make our mistakes and, hopefully, learn from them without much in the way of fanfare or notoriety.

Today, I just want to focus on a Dad and his daughter, a man with a girl he surely loved more than life. That is, after all, what truly matters.

I won’t pretend I can’t imagine what they went through. I believe I can. It makes me sad that such a loss had to happen in such a way. Yet, as I see grief on the faces of fans and athletes, this tragedy allows me to realize that great love exists. It exists even among the famous, the wealthy, the legends.

Because at the core of all the accolades, he was just a Dad with his little girl, a man with his legacy.

Tears

I have often felt waves of sadness roll over me as I contemplate my end. There is no fear of  death in me but there is a sense of sadness. I want to experience all of life with those I love, and the thought of missing some of those things saddens me. I don’t want to miss a thing.

My children, if all goes according to plan, will carry on without me. Sometimes, as it so happened with #24, our plans as parents vanish in an instant. That’s the part I can’t, or won’t, imagine. It’s a horror needs to quickly vanish from my mind. I need to die before my children.

That is when the tears come. I think about Kobe, sitting next to his little girl on that helicopter, experiencing the horrible realization that nothing was going according to his plan. Not only was he going to die but so was his child. I can feel his impossible fear fighting his need to comfort his daughter. Waves of desperation poor over me as I sense his need for survival mixing with his desire to protect his baby girl. In my mind he fights his desire to tighten his restraints with his need to undo them just to hold her tightly.

I can hear screams mixing with “I love you”, fear mixing with love, and helplessness mixing with the desire to survive. It is quickly overwhelming.

So that’s where I stop. The intensity of pain mixed with the focus of a Dad’s need to protect his children proves too much. I can’t take it any further. It threatens the idea I have of my own plan, and leaves me realizing just how little control I have. I say a mantra, wipe the tears and shatter my shell, determined to live. I still don’t want to miss a thing and I know, deep inside, that fear does nothing but cause me to miss things.

The Legacy

I’m not a die hard basketball fan. I knew of Kobe because I grew up not far from where he grew up. I knew of him because of his childhood basketball exploits and the controversy he created locally by deciding to jump right from high school into the NBA.

It turns out he knew what he was doing and he trusted his instincts in doing it. Good man.

The death of Kobe Bryant and his daughter, as well as everyone on board that helicopter, comes with a legacy outside of sports legend. It offers us a moment where great numbers of people can reflect on who they are at the same time while mourning the loss of someone they cared about. Hopefully, it also gives us all a chance to reflect on the things we haven’t lost and the opportunities we still have to embrace those things in gratitude.

Kobe Bryant’s death is not just about the loss of a legend. It’s an opportunity for parents to contemplate their own mortality and their own relationship they have with their loved ones, particularly their children. We often miss those opportunities as we swirl in our life’s distractions, but they are vital to experiencing life fully in our moment. Our moment that is so unexpectedly fleeting.

 

 

Warfare, Home and the Journey

“Life is warfare and a journey far from home.” ~Marcus Aurelius.

What do you think when you read this quote? Do you think of places you’d like to visit? Where is it you’d like to go?

In Stoic circles, many suggest that this quote was advising travel to faraway lands, while others say it is evidence that the Stoics were travelers who sought adventure. I wonder though, can it have a much more meaningful connotation, one that directs us more inward in our own journey?

To me, stoicism  always been an inward process that radiates outward. I see much of philosophy as inward activity generating an outward expression. Stoicism has become the inward displaying itself in the outer world and is a catalyst for who I wish to be. It is not, for me, so much a way of life as it is a way to life.

As I see it, this quote seems to have more to do with inward warfare and that journey we all undertake to varying degrees. It has less to do with traveling to exotic locations and more to do with traveling inward to places I rarely go; those places that scare me yet seem to have such influence over my life.

To understand what I mean, let me start with the second part of the sentence.

“…and a journey far from home.”

What is home to most of us? It is a comfortable place where we feel secure. We can lock our doors and close our windows if need be. We can walk around our space naked without judgement. The choices we make are ours, and we can live in a way that pleases only us. It is our safe place.

Stoics seek balance and in that balance, home is a necessary space. Yet, as with any place of comfort, staying too long at home is a waste of living. While spending time under the blankets in bed is wonderful on a cold winter’s day, it ceases to be a healthy way of living if we stay there too long. We need the discomfort of getting out of bed into the cold, and we need the outdoors to truly feel alive.

That is what I believe Marcus meant with he said, “Life is…a journey far from home.”

Many of us search for those comfortable areas within. Some of us choose to stay there, often for too long. Inwardly speaking, life is a journey far from the comfortable spaces we’ve discovered. Life becomes, instead, the journey away from our comfort zones into the relative undiscovered and uncharted territory of what makes us uncomfortable.

I will rephrase one of my original questions to reflect that notion.

“Where is it you fear to go?”

When I answered that years ago, I also decided that is where I had to go if I wanted to heal and live my fullest life. That took much in the way of the first half of Marcus’ sentence. It took warfare.

“Life is warfare…”

Many will misconstrue Marcus’ meaning when they read the first half of this quote so, invariably, they will be led to the wrong location for the second half. I don’t see life as a inevitable war outside my mind, but I could certainly have experienced the persistent warfare within my mind. Now we may battle those external forces that wish to push us outside our safe space, but that is just the outward expression of the battle being waged within. My truth has always been that when someone pokes at my internal fears the demons always rise to fight. My reaction to those who challenge me is often the reaction my mind has to it’s own journey.

Fear, as most of us know, can be one helluva ruthless bastard. It’s likely why many of us shrink from even the idea of challenging it. Especially the biggest beasts who we’ve ignored with such skill that they often need not even awake to defeat us.

Yet, if we truly wish to live, we must engage in warfare to beat back the beasts that keep us locked in our homes. We must fight them, defeat them, so that we can journey deeper into ourselves. That journey is not only the expression of life but opens up the trail toward living. When we no longer fear going outside our safe spaces we can unlock the door and journey to places beyond.

If life is warfare and a journey far from home, then living is the prize of victory. There is always a difference between life and living and that difference is usually expressed in the balance we must fine. Living can be both the swaddling under warms blankets and it can be the warfare we engage in to enter a winter’s landscape. Balance is in finding the right times for either.

 

Random Thoughts

Today, a moment in time.

Tomorrow is just a dream.

Yesterday only happened in my mind.

Today is yesterday’s tomorrow and tomorrow’s yesterday. Yesterday, today was just a dream. Tomorrow, today will have happened only in my mind. I realized just now I need to stop wasting time thinking about such things. Today is too important to squander, tomorrow never comes and yesterday cannot be changed.

Cliches…ugh. Sometimes I can’t see the forest for the trees (see what I did there?).


I want to hug you. I feel you beside me but when I turn to touch you my fingertips find only dust. Perhaps this is my mind playing tricks on me, tormenting me for wanting something beyond my control, or teaching me to let go of wants and replace them with reality. What I want is out there, what I have is right beside me.

Now, how to make what I want all that is right here.


Dammit. I’m back to yesterday.

So much I would change. Not because I want to change yesterday but because I want to change today. I wish things were different. I wish life was easier and that I was aware of the luster in the treasures I had found.

Actually, I wouldn’t change a thing. I’ve been blessed with the wisdom of a wild experience and know I can rise above just about any challenge thrown my way. Life does not become easier in the absence of challenge. It becomes easier in surviving them.

Thinking about yesterday creates such confusion. That confusion, however, guides us to a clarity of truth.


There is nothing like knowing someone who is the beautiful mixture of heart, soul and humanness. It’s even better when you love that someone and you get to quickly forgive their imperfections because of how fucking perfect they are. They toil, they quake and they are afraid but mostly they are loving, supportive and more courageous than they will ever likely know.

Treasure those moments when you can just sit back and watch. Those tears clouding your eyes and the joy in your heart are often all you ever will need to know about life. It’s not pride you feel in those moments of clarity; it’s pure admiration.


Use your imagination for a moment.

Imagine you are watching TV. Who do you want next to you keeping you warm? Where are you? That’s the person you should be with and that is the place you should be sharing.


I wrote an entire chapter to my new book while in the shower this morning. I love when that happens, and it’s even better when I finally have the chance to write it down. Someday.

 

Sirens (Finding the Light in the Darkness)

I have heard the sirens.

As a firefighter and EMT, they were part of the job. They were part of the adrenaline rush. Like the bugles announcing the pending arrival of a cavalry, the sirens let those who had called know we were coming. I have always loved the sounds of the sirens for that reason.

Then one day the sirens came for me.

I was blinded by a brain injury so I could not see them. I could only hear them, and I knew what story they were telling. In all the times I had ridden in the back of an ambulance with a patient I had always wondered when it would be my turn. That time had come.

Some I had ridden with were taking their last ride in the back of the “bus”. I watched some take their last breaths. I heard some whisper unintelligible prayers just before the end. I always had wondered if the language of the afterlife was something none of us were meant to understand. Even when those final words were words I knew, they always seemed to have some meaning I could not fathom.

Sometimes I would hold their hand at the end and feel the energy drain from their flesh.

I felt that their energy was not gone, it was just not there. It had traveled somewhere else, somewhere I had been before and would see again. As I took my ride in the bus, listening to the sirens play their bugle call, I insisted I was not ready to go. This would not be my last ride and this would not be the end of my story.

Fear and Focus

I was, however, afraid. More afraid than I’d ever been in my life. I had decided a short time before they arrived that I would take this ride to its fullest, but something about being on a stretcher in the back of the ambulance unnerved me. Each time I had been in the back of a bus I was the strong one, the one who was there to help. Now I was the patient, blind and weakened in my condition. Yet in that numbing darkness I could still see a tiny flame that pulsed with the rhythm of the siren. I focused on that fire, the tiny glimmer of hope of survival.

That flame was tiny, but it was mighty.

The paramedics were asking me questions and offering me reassurance. I told them I knew the drill and that I had lied to many people in the back of a bus. They answered that they weren’t lying, and I believed them. The little flame suggested that they were telling the truth. I just had to believe.

Things to Say

I knew I had things yet to say. There were the visions of my children that flashed across the darkness. My eyes had failed but my heart had perfect vision. The eyes are not the only parts of me that could see and I was learning that with each passing second. In my heart I was telling them how loved and admired they were. Had I told them that before, I wondered? Of course I had but this time seemed different. It wasn’t my mouth talking, it was my heart.

I hugged them too, a hug that felt more powerful then it ever had. I wasn’t hugging them with my arms, I was was hugging them with my heart. There was such a vast difference between the two.

I saw the Sun rise in my vision and I heard a poem recited in the wails of the siren. The vivid colors of the dawn and the beautiful rhythm of the prose rose from someplace new. My heart was painting on a new canvas and the words flowed from a place I had once only small glimpses of. I still had things to say, stories to tell, but they would not come from my head. They would come from a new and mostly uncharted territory.

I would let my heart tell the story. My heart would be the artist. I would surrender thought to feeling and let instinct be my guide.

Lessons in the Darkness

There were so many lessons learned that night. Time is short. Our moments are fleeting. Bad things happen to good people. The sirens and those sounding those bugles are heroes.

There were some, however, not so cliche.

When my mind is the guide, I see things through clouded and cracked glass. However, when my heart is guiding me my vision is much clearer. In doing something heart-centered I do it with a clear purpose. Mindfulness is not a practice worth much time for me, heartfulness is.

“Blessed are the pure of heart, for they shall see God.” My mind will always be burdened by scars and the traumas of living, but my heart sheds them in the purity of forgiveness. Scars and scabs cannot stain a heart that is pure; such anomalies cannot exist there. What I learned on that autumn night was that my task has always been to reduce the focus on my brain and let my heart lead the way.

“Your task is not to seek for love, but merely to seek and find all the barriers within yourself that you have built against it.” ~Rumi

The barriers I had built against love resided in my mind and all its traumas. It was time to tear them down and burn them to ash in that little flame I saw in the darkness.

(Coming soon, a short story based on finding the flame in the darkness. Follow my Amazon page here.)

 

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