Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Heroic Resonance
I got some money 'cause I just got paid
oh how I wish I had some one to talk to
I'm in an awful state"
Spoken like a hero who's swung the blade against depression, Cat Stevens lyrics surface. I was released from work today and this stanza kept repeating it's self. I remembered that durring the first few months of living in Spain I would listen to Cat non-stop and -then also battling lonliness- these lyrics gave me humorous comfort. Seems like thats all I write about lately; well...its a big deal being along for a few weeks!
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Of Mice and Pen





"S'pose you didnt have no body.S'pose you couldnt go into the bunk house and play rummy...How'd you like that? S'pose you had to sit out here an' read books. Sure you could play horse shoes until it got dark, but then you got to read books. Books ain't no good. A guy needs somebody - to be near him...a guy goes nuts if he ain't got no body. Dont make no difference who the guy is , long's he with you. I tell ya...a guy gets too lonely an' he gets sick."
Monday, April 21, 2008
A small cave and a big personality

It was just yesterday when I was prancing through glades of aspen and pine, knee deep in slush when I imagined becoming a hermit. Some one who knows me might roll thier eyes, or, if they are the more stern type, might remind me I am married and need to think like a responsible married man. I know. I am speaking more to the idea of hermitude, not to the possibility of becoming one. I once wanted to be a monk; or some deep woods recluse like Thoreau; a witty anti-contemporary who had his stack of theological and philosophical books amassing knowledge.
The wind hushed through the bare branches above me. I stood soaking in the sun. Nearby an old cabin up to its gutters in snow sat, lonely, cold, uninhabitted waiting the summer when the owners would occupy it. I imagined my self in it, what it would be like to live there the majority of my life. Joy undulated into a somber silence.
I resloved then, that I am glad to not be a hermit. So much about the life that the kid from Into the Wild lived is appealing to me, though. Then I remember his revelation: Love. To live is to love. This cant be done running from society and all its misconceptions on how to live, eat, dress. I want to shed that off like a useless garment; even the majority of religious ideology. There's always some theological talking head with a new emergent view on how to be a Follower of Christ. I am simply cloyed with information. I want nonsense. I want to join the wild and forget that this world and its people exist. Yet, those words come back to me: to live is to love.
As for hermitude and knowledge? What good is knowledge, said Paul, if its for your self? It only puffs up. But love, oh true love like Christ showed, builds up. This is truly eternal worth: To invest in another what God has put in. For me to become a cloister, it would be like that farmer whom Christ speaks of in the parable, who loaded his barn full and sat contented, only to be asked of his life that same night. What do I actually live for? was the undertone of my thoughts high in the Rockies. Is it really for my own satisfaction in life? What about my wife? This is the greatest opportunity to love a man can have this side of heaven! How selfish my thinking has been! How empty it would be to jettison all those in your life, and society, for the sake of some peace of mind and wanton pleasure. If Christ had not resurected and given me a living hope, then yes, I could rationalize hermitude. But he did, resulting in a living hope for an eternity full of the greatest, sweetest pleasures one could possibly conjure up. So, the final question I ask is this: What am I really living for and how will I make the action oriented choices to reflect that? I bought a beer; I figure I will start there for tonight.
Cheers!
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Esposa Mia
Rickety door cooling my feet.
Two empty chairs face me, asking
What my plans tonight are.
I stare.
This room and these rooms
Are empty chambers with out
A soul. The appearance of life;
my flimsy frame is all
It sees.
She’s the home this house needs

Xenophobes and Philanthropists go to Denver

Custom for any road trip, since high-school, was to get completely distracted with superflous agendas, last minute suprises (faulty brakes, no food, forgot my board etc.) and lack of any direction from where we were going to where we wanted to go. Many trips were discovered as we went. Needless to say, there was some hesitancy to asking my two dearest friends to acompany me. I just couldnt see it any other way though, it had to be this way, perhaps one last time.




After jumping back in the truck we jetted towards Utah. Utah. Whoa! UTAH! WHOAA!UUUUUUTTTTAAAAAHHHHHH! Whoaaaaaa! What took place was a revolutuon of the mind.We decided shortly after being in Utah that this is where every consiparcy is born. We listened to the creepiest radio stations ever. Found out that Ewin McGregor is a practicing lawyer there and many other absurd "facts" that led Byron deep into senility where he abducted Jer's common sense along the way. They began chanting some odd mantra and spoke of "the code", "the hand shake" and "the U" with sincere fondness. I pressed my face against the window and stared.
























The hours were dwindling away and it was soon time for them to go home. I tried to talk them into staying one more night, pulling the lonely husband with out his wife trick: nothing. I even threatened to drown my sorrows in beer; they're only concern was that it be a quality micro-brew. Needless to say we were on the road to the airport in no time. It was a sad drive for me. The weight of living here began to take its toll on me. Naomi has some time to spend with her kin before she flies out, and still, it will be difficult. This was it for me. And it too was very difficult. We pulled up to thier terminal and I was hoping they would miss thier flight, but Byron assured me they wouldn't. So I drove off, and as I passed them I snapped one last photo...

Its difficult to see, I know, its not even much of a photo artistically. It was on whim. Point and shoot. Yet, it still captured everything I want in a photo of my greatest friends. Byrons goofy contorted face and Jers compassionate one. Both were how they would prefer leaving me. Byrons humor has been medicine for the most fatel ills, and Jers compassion has been like wings God uses to lift a weary soul. So this is it. Im here, waiting for my most dear friend and lover, Naomi, and they are there, at home, living life. Things wont change so much, we will still live for Christ, eachother and the pleasures that both give. Until I see them next, farewell and good ridance you swine!
Saturday, April 5, 2008
Denver ho!
NAOMI: We are sad to say goodbye to all that we leave behind...family, friends, memories. But we are excited for the adventures that await us ahead.