The dull taste of fatigue is in my mouth today, and life feels as ungraspable as sand through my fingers. The sun courses deceptively warm tracks across the bedroom floor, while outside a Wintry air is biting down on the pleasant scenes of work. I'm tumbling and rolling things around inside me, like an ill-balanced washer digesting pairs of sneakers, and I'm frustrated with myself, which adds unnecessary virulence to the process. I started out on a path to come to terms with an ill-fitted brick in an otherwise happy existence, and I find myself diverted down an all-too-familiar by-way: imaginative fantasy laced strongly with emotion. So in barrels frustration, bouncing along in tandem wiggles the facade of the completely natural, and the original issue becomes submerged under questions, regrets, and the sudden gush of an end-of-Winter emotional sap run.
Nature is never sarcastic, and I wonder how humanity developed the taste for it, myself included. Maybe we know that something deep is not right, but we can't conceive of how to adapt to the harmonious path the world around us flows in unceasingly. Maybe we almost want to stop trying, but can't. Can't for love of a life we don't fully understand.
Piece by piece it all gets worked out, and I'll learn to allow myself to take what I need. And slowly, the coarse of my existence will right the wrongs I have taken into myself; this one, and the next, and the next...
Saturday, March 21, 2009
Thursday, March 19, 2009
Collecting the Mist

Sunday, March 15, 2009
Middle March

Thursday, March 12, 2009
Break cover
A veiled moonrise sent me home, and I left the scene a bit breathless and shaky. After a few years of practicing self-denial, I'm beginning to toy with self-control, and in the process pieces of flagrant energy are skipping about unexpectedly. What is a part of me I want to be an honest part, not simply a suppressed tremor, and the experience of sorting it out can be rather startling after such strict internal cloister. Looking back, though, I value the journey through either, or and could wish that many more could experience it, then move on. As Spring weaves back and forth toward realization, I'm sorting through the seeds I wish to sow, and new life is pulsing through my fingertips.
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Seeing the full face
Last night, just before falling asleep, I scrambled out of comfort to write down "Be careful what you wish for, because you might get exactly what you want, and forget exactly who you are, which revealed itself in the struggle against that which wasn’t quite right." Then sleep took me, and I embarked on a restless journey, ending a genuine full-moon dream.
It was multi-layered, like most dreams, with diverging story lines, unfinished sub-plots, and a distracted observer. At one point I entered the new home of my father: a dilapidated Victorian mansion imursed in urban decay. There was a grand foyer with sweeping staircase, and underground rooms hidden under their clutter of dusty, sickly color furniture. After ascending the stair, there somehow was revealed a vastly tall room, which my father had landscaped a spiral terrace of elderberries, which bloomed and bore fruit simultaneously. He told me that he had prepared a special slide-show presentation for me of paintings I had never done in real life, and had invited my dear friends from high school. They began to arrive, embarrassingly dressed in suits, ties and dresses, smiling sheepishly and apparently caught off guard by the meaning they found in the occasion. We proceeded up the gently-sloping stair, and into a great, medieval-looking hall. I don't remember the slide-show, just returning down the stair with my old friends. They were smiling and loosing ties and walking with the relaxed air of having revealed themselves of the stuffiness formal clothing brings at first. I embraced them, and let gush forth sentiments that I wasn't able to find words for back then, feelings that I was subconsciously aware they didn't reciprocate. Except now they did. Now my deep feelings were reflected back to me, returned and changed by my friends own unique natures. I remembered the moment in real life when I discovered that they didn't really understand me, and in the dream I chose to forget it. The alarm clock ripped me away from basking in the feelings, and now that I'm reflecting on them, I'm beginning to doubt the wisdom of my assumptive moment over seven years ago. Did I shut down because I became scared by the trust I invested in them? Was I simply arrogant enough to assume that my mode of being, of understanding, and of expression was all that was real? Most likely, yes. We all get what we ask for, and the trick seems to be to learn to ask for that which is good, and that time, I don't think I did. I think I was wrong.

Monday, March 9, 2009
Written in the Air
Like most English trips, this one finds me nervous, excitable, and generally rattled from my collide with the rest of the world. I feel packaged off and sold as a commodity, here where all is salable and for sale. Money may not be exchanged, but life force is, and I feel emptied of it having relinquished this resource for passage home and our material living. All one big nightmare, really, this world unjust commerce has built up. Virtue and value don't exist because they are not profitable. Even their mention in writing amid the clash and clang of it all feels like a blossoming wildflower in a thundering underground nightclub.
Yet, again England amazes me. The closeness I feel to its Nature and growing things almost makes me swoon, and I stumble about its meadows and hedgerows, my feet clumsy on soil that does not radiate stability like wild home. The great, wriggly, solemn oaks, sparkling hawthorns, resolved beeches, laughing daffodils, and smiling nettles feel like a taste of home, like the flavor of something lost, something that's dying here on earth.
Yet, again England amazes me. The closeness I feel to its Nature and growing things almost makes me swoon, and I stumble about its meadows and hedgerows, my feet clumsy on soil that does not radiate stability like wild home. The great, wriggly, solemn oaks, sparkling hawthorns, resolved beeches, laughing daffodils, and smiling nettles feel like a taste of home, like the flavor of something lost, something that's dying here on earth.
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Early Blackbird song
I'm a bit of a mess today; a bumpy sort of last two days have left me vulnerable to tearing up in frustration and anguish. What for, I cannot be certain. I'm happier to now be 26 than 25, and the weekend was filled with uplifting and validating experiences. The vulnerability stirs up anxiety over our next trip, anxiety that what may have to spill out in emotional self-expression will need to be kept simmering haphazardly as we carry out painting business. The unnaturalness of those situations drives me mad with premonitions about what it will be like to be so far from privacy and home. It's self-distrust, really; silly, unnerving, self-distrust.

In England it will be Spring, which will be wonderful. Like a little whisper to say that everything is alright, the green and growing things will be so comforting to me. Balancing on the edge of Winter, will bitter days and sweet days, snow, sunshine, and changing winds all collide together to finally agree on life and renewal? They always do. Day always follows night, for who could be more loving than the Lord, Whose Laws are reflected in the Laws of Nature, and Who grants us all the help and strength we need to ascend, so long as we ask for it. Such perfect Love I'll never be able to wrap my mind, my feeble emotions around. Here it will be Spring, too, but not before a few more steps, not before its time. It feels like the most vulnerable time of the year, so perhaps I'd better just allow myself to feel it, too, and not be afraid.

In England it will be Spring, which will be wonderful. Like a little whisper to say that everything is alright, the green and growing things will be so comforting to me. Balancing on the edge of Winter, will bitter days and sweet days, snow, sunshine, and changing winds all collide together to finally agree on life and renewal? They always do. Day always follows night, for who could be more loving than the Lord, Whose Laws are reflected in the Laws of Nature, and Who grants us all the help and strength we need to ascend, so long as we ask for it. Such perfect Love I'll never be able to wrap my mind, my feeble emotions around. Here it will be Spring, too, but not before a few more steps, not before its time. It feels like the most vulnerable time of the year, so perhaps I'd better just allow myself to feel it, too, and not be afraid.
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