Wednesday
Dec222010

My Nightmare

 

Mostly written at age 17

 

Between the ages of four and six, a nightmare struck me every night my family and I stayed at my grandmother’s house in the country.  The nightmare always consisted of the same characters and the same struggle.  I still remember riding on those county roads thinking ahead to the creatures of my dream and the struggles that waited.  During those years the thought of falling asleep in that room haunted me long after I was back in the comfort of our own home.

My grandma’s house sat at the very edge of a small town with a population under one hundred and fifty.  After coming in through the front door came the living room, then the kitchen, and then a long hall that led to three bedrooms, a bathroom, and a closed-in back porch where the backdoor opened to barb wire pastures during the day and darkness at night.  About halfway down the hallway my room stood alone, away from the rest of the world it seemed during the

My mom and dad would usually play cards late night with the rest of the relatives at the house, and they let me try to play with them or just watch.  These games lasted pretty late so I could stay up longer than usual.  Eventually I would go to bed not wanting to.  Time moved so slow and my eyes seemed glued open as they stared at the entrance to the bedroom.  I could hear my family talking and laughing while they played Hearts.  Without realizing it, sleep would take over.  The talking and laughter gave way to silence.  I could feel it coming down the long hallway from the backdoor.  My heart beat fast as I stared at the bedroom doorway.  It looked something like a robot from an old science-fiction show.  As always it just stood beside my bed but it scared the living daylights out of me.  I tried to scream but nothing comes out but a hoarse whisper.  The thing would then take me into the

Once in the hall, a robot-like human that floats instead of walking, comes from the backdoor.  It floats down the long dark hallway straight towards me.  The smaller robot laughs.  Believing I am bigger than I am, I swing hard trying to land a right hook on the side of his head, but my arm moves in slow-motion.   They take me into the room where my parents are sleeping.  I scream and yell but they do not hear me.  The robots make them float away and then do the same with my grandmother.  Finally my desperate  screams come out but everyone already floated away.  The robots laugh and laugh, then they float away, still laughing.  I finally awake.  Around age six my screams become screams and the right hooks attack.  My mom and dad never hear me yelling but it is enough to scare the dream demons away. 

Maybe I won control by waking up just enough to get my feet on the ground.  One way or another, the nightmares ended.  For years it scared me to sleep in my grandma’s house.  There was plenty of airy silence as I lay awake many nights listening to travelers pass by on the highway miles away, but the nightmares never came again.  Every dream and every nightmare contain underlying meaning, or latent content.  This is what the dreamer must discover himself.  As I look back on my nightmare I wonder how much has really changed.

Friday
Feb262010

What did David Patterson do to New York?



What is going on?  Over the past few years I have not given much attention to state politics (negligence), but somewhere in the background, just around the corner, anti-Paterson drums have beat incessantly.  His approval rating remain impressively low while a demeaning tone generally infuse commentary and headlines.  Without giving much thought I quietly assumed he was as the public perceived – the bane of the state.

The clamoring really kicked up another notch in early February when the Post and several other papers and blogs began bubbling about a big story the Times was working on – a bombshell that would finally bury the Paterson administration.  I had to see for myself why the governor was being condemned.  Looking through New York papers, journals, blogs, etc., it is practically impossible to not come away with the impression that Governor Paterson is incompetent, out of his league, and objectively incapable of running a government. 

The tabloids take it to another level.  Those who read the Post and Daily News must think Paterson is a village idiot who stumbled through life by virtue (welfare) of his blindness.  Their attacks on the governorship have been pitiless and downright nasty.  Yet, underneath all the exasperation I found very little that indicates scandal or egregious mismanagement.  When he took office he admitted to having an affair while he and his wife were separated – hardly scandalous.

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Friday
Feb192010

Here and There

In the beginning, there was only water.  Then there was land, chiseled by ice.  One million years ago the perfect basin was cut and formed for what would be Michi Gami.  Or, six thousand years ago, essence preceded existence, and a lake was conceived as if it were formed by a glacier a million years before. 

Water trickles through soil and capillaries, underground streams and reservoirs, springs out in bogs and rivers, billows into waves and sprays itself into the air, dissipates, rains, and collects with the morning dew.  There is no beginning or end.  Three hundred twenty-six quintillion gallons of water in the earth and sky.  A cubic meter of air might contain thirty grams of water.  A cubic mile of fog might fill a gallon bucket. 

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Friday
Feb122010

How They See Us

How does the world see us?  Not long ago, in a panicked moment of self-awareness and insecurity, this question seemed gravely important.  Perhaps we are not who we thought we were as a nation or as a people.  One thing is for sure: they do see us.  America spread its fingers around the globe long ago.  American enterprise, iconography, and military is indelible and unavoidable.  We may be despised and we may be envied, but it is hard to imagine us venerated for ideals and morals that once defined our aspirations.  For much of the past decade an outspoken American contingent has complained about the world-at-large with indignation and distrust, as if we had done nothing to deserve anything but perfect compliance with our requests and desires. 

Earlier this year, Atlas & Co published a collection of essays written by twenty-one writers from twenty-one countries called How They See Us: Meditations on America.  The overall perspective in the book sees from the outside with an insider’s ken since over half of the authors lived, taught, or spent substantial time in the U.S.  This lends a more balanced perspective, perhaps, and a duality manifests itself without being psychologically conflicted.  Nearly all of the writers are novelists or directly involved with creative literature, and rather than being didactic or accusatory or attempting to persuade their readers by argument, their personal narratives relate experiences, and Meditations becomes a fitting description.

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