David Letterman, a public man
October 3, 2009
DAVID LETTERMAN
Last night I watched a very public man do what men should do when they go along the wrong way, he did what so few public people ever do; he had made errors, he admitted them without excuse, he stopped someone else from taking advantage of his mistakes, and is now focusing on what he can to protect all that he loves in life.
The list of public people who give in to the knee-jerk reaction of denying and lying is a long one, one that has grown continually for decades; the actions of people who ignore the truth that they are responsible. We are all responsible, we all occasionally go down a regrettable path; and then we are similarly responsible for doing what we can to make amends. Letterman has done all that, he has not asked for pity or special favor; he is paying a price now and will to pay more in the future, perhaps a long future.
That some people will feel the need to throw ashes on his head makes me ask how they have responded when they did something wrong; remember that no one has never made a misstep or two, that is how we learn, that is what we are about, it is how a man responds that shows how real qualities of character.
How do you and I respond when we do something wrong? The answer is what is relevant and important here.
UNCERTAINTY
April 10, 2009
There are times that bring on feelings of uncertainty or helplessness, they may arrive at four in the morning or as I walk down Michigan Avenue on a beautiful spring day. There are times when I look to what I have depended on and trusted, only to find that they are not enough or have disappeared. These are the times when I am sure there are no alternatives left in my cupboard.
When this happens I have found out that there is a reason:That somehow or other I have put myself in the center of my universe, this weak bearing. If I then imagine that I am not the center, and even though I can’t put into words or images what is I do know, I am certain of its Presence and know instinctively that it doesn’t disappear or disappoint. And when I do manage to get my head around that idea I find that I am in a better place, a place where I ought to be.
This is not a piece of any religion or cult, just something I discovered that fits right, and so I thought I’d pass it along.
A Refurbished Part for the Engine
March 25, 2009
I have never had the imaginative cues that would have me starting a book nevertheless a saga, I have never done much writing at all other than journals and these few unscripted scribbles, so I don’t know the rules or guides for starting a new chapter, finishing another. About all that I know is intuitive aided by the thoughts of just a few authors and a friend or two.
I know intuitively that I have just completed a chapter of what voyage.
Without resorting to those rules and guides for either novels or non-fiction writing I figure that a chapter has characters whose role grew, diminished or evaporated through the circumstances that the protagonist experiences and how the characters may fit and be important, appropriate or irrelevant. Out of the weather of events and fates the main character emerges into the next chapter a different person, one who is more fitting to his fate. Routes and passageways have been explored carefully so as not to damage the keel although the loss of a little hull paint is no great price as it will be replaced at the next haul-out.
It is not that there are or ever will be winners and losers, instead there is a crew who may or not be aboard for the whole voyage. One plans then begins a cruise with the idea that the plank owners, the original volunteers and the paid crew will be there at the final port; there is no reason at all to believe this, it is a wish coming from inexperience and love. At each port along the way there is the opportunity for some to leave and some to sign on; there is languishing on docks ahead a few whom I have no reason to choose or be chosen because they are as yet unmet. There may or may not be berths open at that time, and once leaving port it is rare to return to sign on someone who had been left on land.
Yesterday I was informed that the engine needed a new auxiliary part and that it would lengthen the time I can be at sea and maneuver me more easily through squalls; this addition came as a complete surprise to the engineers but it will be installed shortly.
Right now the pilot is obtaining charts of what opportunities have just been offered by the current repair, the charts he thinks he needs are now being drawn as the previous are now out of date and will be stored away in the map drawer. Like all charts they provide information, but no chart, no meteorologist, no pilot knows all that lays just beyond the horizon—and that uncertainty is what makes everyone anticipate the long cruise. The pilot has a few more lines from squinting in bright sun , he is not as quick to bend or haul a line as he had been, but this is of little concern because the tackle we carry has been proven and maneuvers well practiced.
The boat will make a test run of but a few days to check out the maintenance and fitting of the rig while thinking again on those new charts that are arriving piecemeal from the cartographer. The anticipation, that anticipation, tomorrow’s anticipation sparks the crew-ready to embark and hoist sails.
POSSIBILITIES
March 23, 2009
POSSIBILITIES
It is possible to cherish something so much that I destroy it.
It is possible to desire someone so much that I frighten.
It is possible to proclaim so loudly that they cover their ears.
It is possible to do and be all of those efforts; but it is necessary that I try again today and then tomorrow.
The possibility is the prize.
The One True Way
March 15, 2009
Last night I was discussing with a friend the nature of the religious experience (perhaps this explains why I spend so much time alone); and the only way to maintain or repeat the experience. It will be no surprise that mine is the only right way to do this is by going the route that I do, that every other direction is misguided and leads to dead ends.
That someone else would have the temerity to claim that connecting with others, to do something in concert was a road to enlightenment or even epiphany seems so contrary. My ascetic struggles obviously are what has brought me to this stage of development. The argument was going absolutely nowhere nor could it; if each of us finds ourself in a new place, with new perspective that is so life changing and defining it seems impossible that someone else could have done this differently.
I now have first hand knowledge of why there are religious differences; that there will always be differences; why they are so violent in defending the true way.
That Abject Feeling
March 4, 2009
There are times in everyone’s life when the terror of aloneness approaches the limits of what can be handled, if the loneliness was any more painful it would push me over the edge. When I see that boundary coming at me I automatically look for diversions, we look for diversions because allowing or welcoming pain is weird or pathological. They might be: work, booze, drugs, orgasms, casual friends, games and entertainment, there is Twitter and Facebook; all these and more allow me to shy from this abject feeling, this most horrible of feelings.
There are times in everyone’s life when the bliss of solitude is the greatest pleasure imaginable; I then travel with the knowledge that I am where I ought to be and who I ought to be. I need nothing; I will have activities but they are no longer necessities. When I have let myself drift from being the center of my universe and that necessity to control I get to enjoy this rightness.
To find the latter I have to allow abject loneliness its time on stage, letting it cavort and destroy the sets, frightening us actors. It is when I stay for that complete show, all three acts, watch the curtain descend that I can allow myself to be–to leave the theatre in peace.
Forcing myself to feel the pain of loneliness and emptiness is not masochism because there is no pleasure in it; but from the depths of that terror arise bliss, joy, rightness and a knowledge of that that allows all this to be.
Looking at the garden
April 3, 2008
There is that that carries us beyond the most difficult problems, the hardest of times, that continues when optimism disappoints, that offers hope.
In times when pain is at a level that obliterates other thought; in times when anxiety and fear of what might come disturb our understanding of what it is to stay alive; at times when we are sad and frustrated with the knowledge of children tortured and murdered for sport—-at these times, times that each of us has known, at these times we know intuitively something else, something beyond, something infinite. The name, the label, the description is irrelevant unless it interferes; remember that it is always in our nature to look, to seek, to believe in that that is just beyond whatever this is now.
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I don’t have anything specific that prompted me to write the above, there is nothing dramatic going on here, no weather report of interest, no conflict with landlord or boss, nothing much at all; it is just that I need to remind myself of what I wrote, find it within myself. And I thought that somebody else might be prompted to find it also, because it has always been there. I publish this right now because if I don’t do it now the fire will die down, there will be just warm ashes.