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Sunday, May 17th, 2009 | Author: Moody

Edvard Munchs painting of Rodins _The Thinker_

Edvard Munch's painting of Rodin's The Thinker

Life is precious. I mean, you have to realize it for it to be true—but once you do, you see how obvious it is. It helps if you read a lot, watch good movies, care about others and the state of the world and do something about it. I’m not sure how you can be taught to do that. I’m even less sure that it needs to be taught… at least any other way than by example.

Yet also it is true that “La contemplation rend souvent la vie malheureuse.” So said Nicolas Chamfort. But “the unexamined life”, as per Socrates, “is not worth living”. I know that contemplation and examination are not the same thing, per se, but maybe it is that we have to make ourselves a bit miserable—or have to be made miserable; have to have misery imposed on us, to some degree, by circumstance—in order for life to appear to us as precious as it is? Would this explain why, then, I find life so precious and worth living? And where is the balance point?

I’m just tossing this stuff up in the air to see what will float or fly, and what will fall again.

See, I’ve been re-reading my words here and considering what I’ve been saying. I’ve drawn some definite lines in the sand. I’ve erected some barricades (at least according to some people). I’ve done so because I have come to honest conclusions in my life. Conclusions about life; its nature, its origins, its outcomes, its end and its, life’s, meaning to me. I don’t know with 100% certainty what’s true. It galls me when people claim they do. But maybe I need to let that go. I know that I don’t know everything. I hardly know anything at all. But what I have learned in the last four decades of my life—mostly via trial and error—has given me the confidence to assert that life is meaningful insofar as we find meaning in it. I’ve said this before, I think. It’s worth repeating. I think now that it’s a matter of semantics, whether one says that life is inherently meaningful (or meaning-ready) or inherently meaningless (or devoid of meaning). It amounts to the same thing in the end. Why? Because we still must suss it out, discover it for ourselves, attach ourselves to it and value it. The ultimate meaning of life could be pinochle or the Glass Bead Game, or poker or The Sims. I don’t think it’s any of those things, but I’m saying that it could be and there’d be know way to know it as such unless and until I decided for myself that it was. The ultimate meaning of life could be reserved for bacteria or minerals. What kind of hubris does it take to say, “Yes, well, of course the ultimate meaning of life is this personal, human thing”? So let’s drop the ‘ultimate meaning’ thing here, right here and now.

Life, it seems to me, is meaningful. It’s meaningful because I find meaning in it or take meaning from it. I find meaning in it or take meaning from it because, as I live my life, events and things (verbs, and nouns with and without the vocative case) take on an intimate resonance through which I glean, or even grok, a sense of connective value. That value is, in the experience of it, timeless, even when it is realized because it is grasped in an inherently finite moment. In other words, ‘valuation’ is not in itself temporal (used here without any implication of there being some metaphysical eternal state).

Sorry for getting all convoluted there. Thing is, it’s difficult to say exactly why it is that life is meaningful, and “It just is!” is not at all good. Every question leads to several possible answers, and each answer leads to several definite questions, and so on. O!, Philosophie! Or do I mean Oy!—as in vey? Were I to wax poetic, as a non sequitur I’d have to assert that life is meaningful because Eros and Psyche are able to reflect on the song of a goat and not die. Eh…

Sorry for getting all non sequiturish on y’all. Anyway…

I think it’s time for me to go seek out a meaningful bite to eat, and leave the contemplation to my stomach for the nonce. Mostly, it contemplates things in the rich domain of gastronomy. Which reminds me that I must add the brilliant M.F.K. Fisher’s The Art of Eating to my foreshortened list of Must Reads. The other night I read Fisher’s “The Standing and the Waiting” (from the aforementioned book) to Kisha, at her request, and simply loved it.

Oh, and, speaking of reading, I’m within 45 pages of being finished with Infinite Jest. Not sure what I’ll be reading next, but I’m sure it’ll be good. Perhaps V., or Dance Dance Dance. Very likely I’ll supplement with a Walter Kaufmann book. And, too, I’m about halfway done with A Confederacy of Dunces, which I’m listening to in audiobook format at work.

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Saturday, March 07th, 2009 | Author: Moody

Poised on the edge of an abyss, we surf the wave of being into the future. It requires skill, and foresight, control, and concentration. One wrong move and, acutely unbalanced, we will topple into the crushing chaos of the massive wave. Karma is what happens at the point where intention meets action and action metes out results. As the force that drives the wave propels us forward, we are always at the mercy of its power. It is the great unconscious progenitor of our kind; blind, mute, deaf and dumb. Yet it is that it finds its expression in us. We are the consciousness of the wave; eyes, ears, nose, tongue, touch—the body sensate, alive to its existence. The abyss is the greater unconsciousness that yawns like a bottomless maw, ready to swallow us, ready to swallow even the wave itself, to take it all into nothingness. But so long as we ride the wave, the future unrolls with us.

Please pardon the poetic language. I have lately been taken by a sense of our predicament that rather outreaches my ability to capture it in the usual prose. I want to turn my attention to it here at VWN, break it down into accessible entries that reflect my understanding, but it’s difficult for me. There are so many voices out there on the Web saying many of the things I’d like to say, only saying it better. I read them to inform myself. It would be foolish of me to presume to be equally as informative, when most of my time is spent processing pieces of paper in a smallish office. Hell, these days I’m just happy to have a job, right?

Then again, it’s the people at my job whose lives inspire me to attempt to put some things to words here. They inspire me because I have learned just how little concern people can have with regard to what’s going on in the world. Not that I don’t wonder if maybe I’m the fool here, because I pay attention to and worry about things that I really don’t have a lot of control over. I mean, what good does it do me to think about the peril we’re in? I still have to drive a car by myself every workday morn. I still have to buy food products whose very existence is virtually an affront to the planet’s ecosystem. I still have to participate in the madness of an American life. Don’t I?

It’s all well and good to say “Tune in, turn on, drop out”—until you are responsible for helping maintain a household that you do not get to set the rules for. It’s all well and good to say “I quit!”—until you realize that your options are strictly limited by factors you cannot alter, even out of necessity, without a significant investment of time and capital and you have neither.

And yet there has to be some sort of change for me, because I cannot stand idly by and just watch the bad things happen. I have a strong sense of responsibility where life on earth is concerned. However convinced I may be that we have passed a tipping point, bluffed too long with a bad hand and now have to lay down our cards and pay up, I feel that it is very important we face the treacherous future with our eyes wide open.

(More to come.)

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Sunday, November 16th, 2008 | Author: Moody

Today is my significant other’s birthday. I am using her birthday as occasion to write the first post here in a good long while. Really, I want to just draw a portrait of the Zeitgeist and its garments while noting that, for me, there is nothing more important today for me than my love’s birthday.

Life has never been an easy proposition for me. I’ve had trouble for most of my years. Some years have been bad enough that, to this day, I wonder how it is I survived them. This is doubly true for my partner. Yet, here we both are, living our lives as best we can, imperfectly and not always (or often) easily. We’ve been together for over seven years now. As this day commemorates the day she entered the fray, unarmed and as innocent as any newborn child, it seems to me important to note that she has come a long way from the worst of her life and has reclaimed a great deal of all that was, by force and cruelty, taken from her. I am proud of her more than I worry about her; I trust that she will only get stronger, hold her life more tenaciously, find ever more to take joy in.

The world around us in chaos. Chaos is not a bad thing, per se, but it often is troubling for those who find themselves thrown by it from the comfort of stability into the maelstrom of uncertainty. The fires recently raging in California, having claimed the homes of so many, having injured people and having seriously disrupted the lives of so very many, seem to underscore the chaos of the times. Then there’s the Prop. 8 (”Propostion Hate”) issue still unfolding. A longtime friend of mine only recently married her partner, and now there are those who’d see their marriage and the possibbility of marriage for all gay people denied on grounds that are selfish, bigoted, narrow, myopic and solely self-serving. It is the touch of chaos in people’s lives again. And then there’s the financial crisis in America, and California’s deep debt. Job loss is significant. Job scarcity a problem. Mortgages and foreclosure are topics of anxious conversations everywhere. Chaos visits us all. I’m so glad Obama won.

My partner lies across the bed, napping, an audiobook playing in her ear (I can hear it, like a cricket scratching at paper or a radio with a poor AM signal playing in the other room). I made sure she had a good birthday this year. Her mom wasn’t going to make sweet potato pie this time, which would have been a first, but I paid for the ingredients and ensured that it would get done. I couldn’t let her down, couldn’t see her let down. After more than seven years, I’ve only come to love and appreciate her more.

The light falling through the window is yellowish from all the smoke. If I look out, I can see Chihiro, my Toyota Corolla, parked in the shade of the trees. Someone recently broke into the car. The thief broke out the back window and went through the car, pulling stuff out, opening everything. All the thief took as the power cord for my iPod and the cord that connects it to my stereo. I’d taken my stereo face inside, like always, and I’d never leave my iPod in the car. Minor damage, really, but I felt violated. I got the window (and its tinting) fixed the next day and installed a car alarm. I feel safer, a little more protected from the chaos.

More recently, I was able to go out to dinner with my ex-wife. She was on her way through Southern California (where our marriage ran its course) on a roadtrip to San Francisco to see the Legendary Pink Dots play. She lives in New Mexico now. It was a really nice visit for the most part, the only real faux pas being committed by yours truly. sigh But it all turned out well, and we had a nice dinner at Real Food Daily in Santa Monica. We shared music in the car as we drove. We talked about our lives. I dropped her off at her motel and came home with this sense of my life being just so long, this long series of events, a collection of changes and adjustments, with retrospect always coming in clearest. I came home to my partner and wanted nothing more than to fall in her arms… followed by some Web surfing, of course. Chaos prowled in the distant miles.

My throat is sore and my sinues are irritable. Still, in this tiny little pocket of the world, there is peace. I wish it belonged to everyone. I’m glad that it exists at all.

Happy birthday, my love.

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