Wednesday, December 18, 2013

On Vacuums and Pennies - Prose

On Vacuums and Pennies

On purpose,
I often vacuum
Too close
To things
That could get caught
In the brushes.
It is not for laziness
But
For the love
Of seeing
What will Happen Next.
(Ah, the Sacred Next)

For instance…

I dive headfirst
Into relationships that are improbable
Just because I love her
Now.

I hike miles thorough forests
Too late into the evening
Until it is too late to get home in the light
Because I want to squeeze
More and more
And more
And more
Into the day.

I talk to addicts in dark alleys
I occasionally shoplift
I eat pills that are unknown to me
I start careers that are foreign to me
I dive into new religions that scar me
I push and push
and push
and push
because I find
That only at the edge of the known
Life resides
And God
Is in there
Somewhere.

So the penny that sticks up
From the plastic housing
Of my vacuum
Is my trophy-
It illustrates the results of my search:

A clean floor
And a damaged vacuum
That still works.

--Eric Marley
January 2012

Life Is Not About... - Essay

Life Is Not About...

Life is not about immediately having the answers.

Everyone that has found their way
Had to first find a way
To find their way.

This takes:
Time (as long as it takes)
Mistakes (no one finds their way without them)
Patience (with self and others)
Gratitude (for the whole damned dance)
Patience (Did I mention this already? Good).

After all, no one is born with a compass.


Eric Marley
April 19, 2012

Is It Really This Easy? - Motivation Piece


Is it really this simple? 

Is it really a matter of holding certain thoughts in my mind; ones that are mostly and increasingly free of negative chatter and stories, that tell truths about the present and my indomitable spirit rather than stories of past failures or wrongs committed by or against me - and seeing even the positive thoughts as things less pure than my indescribably beautiful and whole Being?

Is it really a matter of getting clear – I mean crystal clear – about what it is that I am after, and then remaining true to that vision through temporary tests and supposed setbacks? Is it a matter of seeing that vision and retaining focus; of choosing little symbols of what it is that I am after, like the red turntable and the poster of the epic little space where I want to live, and the picture taken from the deck of some other dreamer’s sailboat as it approaches distant, sun-soaked islands?

Is it a matter of learning to laugh when I used to cry? Of seeing beauty where I once saw ugliness (including in the mirror)? Is it a matter of seeing perfection where I once saw something less in relationship, in situation, in life?

Has it always been as simple as seeing supposed self-sacrifices as opportunities to develop patience and compassion and wisdom, as well as developing a self-discipline that allows me to stay in my place of peace now and forever? And what of taking personal responsibility for the things that happen that are difficult, where I have made choices that encouraged those stern teachers to come to me; yet still, is that mercy behind their eyes? Has accepting them without hatred and judgment and self-flagellating regret always been a part of my work here? 

Is my happiness and success really the result of “throwing it out there” and then working without frantic twitchings, without demand that things be different NOW, but working with patience, compassion, laughter, generosity and spontaneity as the Universe decides when I am fully ready to receive, for my benefit and the benefit of others? Am I really in charge of defining what “success” is, for me? Have I always been in charge? Has it always been a function of focus, faith and fortitude?

Really? That’s it? That’s the formula? Loving life and seeing its beauty in all its forms, including myself, in every moment?

Yay!

--Eric Marley
April 16, 2012

Last Mission - Short Story

No one was more surprised than Alex when the domestic 737 in which he was traveling split apart at 32,000 feet. No one was less surprised either, if surprise can be measured by the super-caffienated jolt of adrenaline that shot through every body alive long enough to note it. Each person got what they could handle - a kind of height, age and weight appropriate dose of shock that carried a stoic and monochromatic notice to every soul that felt it. The message was simple: “I am going to die”.

About seventy-five percent of the passengers felt nothing at all. One minute they were exhibiting their humanity by laughing, smiling, chewing, snoring, walking quickly to the restroom, reading, daydreaming, watching movies, chatting, typing and, for Elwin McAllister, even trying to fart quite silently next to a mercifully sleeping aisle-mate. In the next blink of an eye and white light they left their disintegrated, disemboweled or disfigured humanity behind to continue towards another light.

The rest of the passengers, in various states of injury ranging from deafness to missing limbs and organs to fried skin to no injuries at all emptied into the sky as the jet slowly ripped in half and each piece of the fuselage began independently tumbling through the air. The passengers sprayed out like bugs being thrown from buckets.

Alex was one of a few people not seriously physically injured. As it happened, he had set towards the rear of the careening projectile and had been rifling through his carry-on bag when the explosion occurred. The utter shock of the blast made Alex’ body reflex in the form of vomit, which was now in his eyes as he fell. He instinctively wiped them. His skin felt unfathomably cold. He held his breath at first, pushing hard in his torso and making an involuntary “nnnn” sound as he tumbled through the air.

His former military training now began to kick in, so while the “nnnn” sound continued for a few more moments, he righted himself and ceased tumbling, spreading his arms wide as if he had a parachute on, as any self-respecting Ranger would.

The few screams Alex had heard faded quickly but he could still see his fellow passengers, most still attached to their seats, some trailing pink mist, others falling limply through the sky.

As dire as the situation was for Alex, his nervous system actually calmed; his thoughts were clear and his breathing approached a normal rate, a testament to the strength of his training and his talent as a former soldier.

“I’m going down,” Alex thought incredulously and with cool-headed sarcasm, “in a goddamned commercial jet. Oh, the irony.”

Suddenly, and with great surprise to him, each and every military mission in which he had ever been involved began to flash in front of his eyes in a kind of hyper-speed slow motion, showing the scenes in excruciating detail. He attempted to blink the visions away, but was unsuccessful. He saw them all, from boot camp to his final missions in Iraq and Pakistan just before he was honorably discharged.

This review and detail was more terrifying to Alex than his impending death, he having pushed such memories to the dark corners of his mind many years ago. The reason these visions were so terrifying to Alex was because, although he had been a tremendous father, community leader, husband and businessman, he had also once been a ruthless and vengeful soldier through parts of two Gulf Wars. At the time, his actions had been justified by his simplified, young military man’s world-view. The ends had once justified the means. These necessitated making the enemy suffer, whether that meant prolonging an agonizing death, deep humiliation, torture, or simple annihilation. He had experienced a change of heart towards the end of his career that had manifested itself in a type of mercy that was confusing to himself and to those in his command, but that he had enjoyed. The damage had been done, however, in many ways; because although in his mind his more recent life was an atonement of sorts for the kind of soldier he had been, years later when the memories arose in waking or in dreamtime his stomach still soured. Why these visions would parade in front of his eyes at this moment was a question that did not enter his consciousness as he now calmly fell, but it’s a good one for us to ask.

The Universe is neither cruel nor kind, but on occasion it tends to look more the latter. For although Alex was indeed a good man, he was also about to die and would have been justified in control-breathing his way to Mother Earth with no other thoughts than, “why me” or “oh, shit”. But since that was not the case, since the steaming vengeance of his former military life had shown itself, when he saw little Olivia he was more motivated than he might otherwise have been to move into action.

Olivia, only two-and-a-half years old, fell gracelessly through the air. To her physical credit, she no longer screamed in terror, but she had not passed out, either. Alex had no way of knowing this, but his intimate knowledge of the human body and the way a live one differs from one not so endowed told him that this small person was alive. She was not far away. He knew he could get to her within a few seconds.

At 15,000 feet Alex tucked his arms and closed his legs together to make a beeline towards a terrified Olivia.

He expertly slowed his approach to the terrified toddler and at 13,000 feet grabbed her clumsily, stopping her slow tumbling. His hunch had been correct; she was alive. However, he could see that she was unable to breathe because of the wind in her face. He turned his back to the approaching earth and held her against his chest so that her face was out of the wind, allowing her to breathe more freely. He looked down at her, his left arm holding her small body tight against his while his right hand gently cradled her head. She looked into his wondering face with wide eyes from beneath his strong arms.

So that is how it came to be that Alex was found on his back in a Midwestern farmer’s field, the body of a little girl not his own in his arms, a look of sublime peace on both their faces.    

Liftoff - Prose

Liftoff

Astronaut (in radio voice): Houston, we have a problem…
Houston: Elaborate, please?
Astronaut: I have to share rent,
I barely have enough to eat,
“They” don’t like me,
I haven’t taken a vacation in 5 years,
I can’t afford to change my own oil,
I avoid going out with friends because I can’t afford to pay,
I am in a “bad luck streak”,
I don’t feel good about myself,
I get depressed sometimes,
I feel like I’ve been a failure in my marriages, my career and in life in general...

Houston: Your present situation and observations have no bearing on your final destination. Proceed with countdown.
Astronaut: Thank you, Houston. Proceeding with countdown.  

TEN
I sense I am more powerful and beautiful than that for which I am currently giving myself credit;
NINE
I remember how much I love being around my friends, having fun with my hobbies and being free of worry;
EIGHT
I remember my innate talents - the things I was born to do well - and I remember with fondness the many times in my life I have used them to their fullest;
SEVEN
I begin to do “the small things” like exercising and meditating every day, making and fulfilling my commitments to myself and others, and dismissing negative stories about myself and others from my mind with kindness and compassion;
SIX
I surround myself with Positive like a blanket…and like a flak jacket;
FIVE
I actually enjoy sacrificing some comfort while keeping balance as I let my ideas settle on my stilling soul, like shy butterflies approaching a blossoming flower…
FOUR
I solidify flexible plans that will bring all my loves into my life in a consistent way, and that begin to make old comforters less needed and useful;  
THREE
I laugh at the whole damned process, including myself;
TWO
I put my plans into motion with compassion and wisdom and wonder;
ONE
I give thanks every day for the harvest and for the new challenges that come my way…
LIFTOFF! 

--Eric Marley, 2012

Committed - Prose

Committed

I stood alone
With the opportunity laid before me.
I understood it
I comprehended my own situation
And I saw the risk -
The gap
Between the reward
And the moment.

And I, as a cliff diver
Stepped to the edge of the rock;

And I, as a soldier
Kicked in the door;

And I, as a surgeon
Took the scalpel in hand;

And I, as a man in love
Looked into her eyes;

And I, as a surfer
Paddled for the wave;

And I, as an addict
Put the needle back down;

And I, as the keynote speaker
Walked to the stand;

And I, as a peer
Said “no”;

And I, as a patriot
Stood in the assembly;

And I, as a writer
Hit “send”;

And I, as a seeker of a better way

Committed.

--Eric Marley
May 2011

Depth, The Story of a Man - Prose/ Story

Once I experienced a vision wherein I saw a man walking up and down mountains, valleys and plains with a heavy burden on his back. I felt the depth of this man's loneliness on so many levels that I believed (and still do) that it was me in some other plane. The man had no one in the world. If he ever saw another human being it was from a distance. His job was to wander, to live, to survive.

I wrote this poem to illustrate to an extent what I felt.

Depth, The Story of a Man

He sat alone
With his back to the mouth of a cave.
The cave, new to him,
Was in the middle of a cliff
Halfway up the face
Of a rock wall
Inhabited only by wild sheep
And eagles.

It was early evening
In early autumn;
A fire cast a warm glow
Behind him

So that

If human eyes were to look up
From the valley
Far below
They would see
The silhouette of a man
Illuminated by the fires
Of hell.

But human eyes would never see
This man.

The clothes the man wore
Slung across his back
Were the same the elk wore
When it was alive

The teeth the man wore
Around his neck
Were the same the bear wore
When it bared them at the man
For the last time.

There was a sense of Depth
(For that was his name);
Of unending
Space-like

Loneliness? 

Not exactly…

Emptiness?

Not exactly…but closer

Which pervaded his very Being.

The man
Silhouetted by fire
Enshrouded by increasing dark
Smelled the flesh
Of the yearling he had killed
On the way to the cave.

The smell was his company
It made him feel
Not lonely.

It was enough.

And it was not enough.

Under hooded eyes
The man saw the last of the
Evidence
Of the sun
Sucked down greedily
By the mountain on the other side
Of the impossibly deep canyon
Out of which
He had breathlessly climbed.

Somewhere inside of himself
Something wilder than he
Gulped a deep, throaty
Lungful of air
And howled.

But Depth, the man
Was barely cognizant of the anguished howl
Of the thing inside him.

Instead, he removed something
From under his cloak;
It was a piece of cloth
A sash, dyed with blood-
The blood of a human-
And he looked at it.

There had been a woman, once
She had been his match in many ways
She had been greater than he in others.

For She heard things
Before he even knew
They existed;
A bird, a wolf, an oncoming storm…

For instance,
Depth would be walking like he did
On feet wrapped in many layers
To soften his step
With She next to him
Barefoot.

Depth would notice
That he was suddenly alone
And would look for She
With a degree of consternation.

And he would find her
Making a fire
And cutting branches for a shelter
Under a crystalline sky.

At first when this would happen
Depth would stand silently nearby
And frown.

But more than once
The sky opened
And fire flashed across
Great growling, boiling clouds
And water came from all directions

But not so much
In the shelter…

So Depth had been grateful
For her wisdom-
The wisdom of She.

She had said that the Earth and the Sky
Told her things
Many times
That only a silent person
Could ever know.

Depth had often wondered what she meant
Since he seldom spoke
But he never heard
What She heard.

Now She was gone
And his thoughts raged
And tore.

Depth had wandered
For seventy three years
After the passing of She
Before he found the new cave.

He never saw another human being.

He ate roots and raw meat.
His voice descended into growls.
If he used it at all.
The whites of his eyes
Turned red.
His grey hair stood on end.
His scars ached
And multiplied.

The night he found the new cave
He lay down in it
And
Slept
Hard.

When he awoke, it was dark outside
And the fire was low
But it was light in the cave where he was.

In the light was She.

She said nothing
But waited for him
With her arms outstretched.
   
He felt peace for the first time.

Depth’s bones still lay in the new cave.

If you were to find them
You would see the teeth from the bear
And the teeth from the man
And you would find
Somehow preserved
The red sash
That had been dyed with her blood;
The blood
Of She.

--Eric Marley
October 2011