Lately I’ve been wishing I was more philosophical; more intellectual. I’ve been thumbing through books that I hope will make me smarter; grasping at strands of abstract thought that I hope will give me answers so that I may give them to others. So that I may use them to be more sure of myself. I’ve been both drawn to and intimidated by those more intelligent than myself, hoping wide-eyed that I might steal in on the heels of one of them to become something of a shadow in their world. I listen furiously to what they say, even the things I don’t understand, trying at least to tuck some bit of information into a wrinkle in my brain. Surely I will absorb through osmosis whatever I immerse myself in? I can only hope.
Because sometimes I feel like I have exhausted every good thing in myself. Like I have nothing left to give the world, nothing left with which to impress. When I am out of creativity and light, I can only hope that the Creator will help me make something beautiful, help me to draw beauty to myself and reflect it back into the world like the glint of a broken mirror in the sun.
An eternal effort can be exhausting, but when I turn it over to the rhythm that the Master drums within me, the experience is rich and it is called life and I eat it up like chocolate cake. That isn’t to say it is easy, even after the letting-go bit is done. Chocolate cake isn’t just all the tasty stuff put together, you know. It’s mostly bland flour, really. There’s sour baking soda, there’s bitter cocoa, and the oven gets so miserably hot. It’s not all sugar and vanilla and comfort. As a child I was mortified to learn that there was salt in the cookies, but Mom said they made the cookies taste better so then I was ok with it, but it was still strange to me that not all the components in something so tasty were tasty by themselves. A five-year-old’s first lesson in “The whole is greater than the sum of it’s parts.”
But altogether cookies and cakes are delicious; I find that even the bad ones have some redeeming qualities. They’re being served at the party in the Now suite on the eighteenth floor of Mortality, and they’re for me; they’re for everyone. For all the would-be magicians and the planners of plans, dreamers of impractical dreams and the artists under the bridges with their cans of spray paint; spray-on anger, spray-on angst. You Picassos, you; you Michelangelos and you don’t even know you’ve made the overpass your Sistine Chapel. For the used-car salesmen and the sk8r punks; calling all the thumb-suckers and the overbearing mothers. Come you pseudo-scientists who love to experiment with the boundaries of life, calling all time-wasters and procrastinators. Calling all attention-addicts and all you nerds from your basements; calling all thrill-seekers and adrenaline junkies, all you hippies with unwashed hair. All the intellectuals and philosophers, creators and consumers, criminals and congressmen, ladies and gentlemen, tramps and gypsies. Calling everything I’ve ever wanted to be, everything I have ever been and everything I have tried desperately to avoid becoming, everything it has never occurred to me to be. There’s cake for you and cake for me, because every day is Eternity’s birthday and we’re invited.
Just so you know.
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