Having spent most my life outside the box, I love being lost. All right, go ahead, nod your head and smile sadly. But I mean physically lost. Like in a snowstorm in the woods. To be lost is to shed all shackles, to erase the façades of society for a time and – if there is even a little danger – to come fully alive with the effort of surviving by your wits and your will. Now you might think that’s a classic description of escapism, but somehow the exhilaration of an adventure doesn’t supplant thoughts about the rest of my life, even while it’s happening. On the contrary, it clarifies and enhances my whole world, putting things in order and perspective the way dreaming does. I find myself remembering, analyzing, fantasizing, rehearsing. The two tracks complement and inspire each other as if by metaphor.
Did I say tracks? Extend that metaphor, if you will (by the time I let go of a double meaning, you’ll have stretch marks on your brain). The physical tracks in nature and the psychological tracks that people leave in society are each profound with information about motive, purpose, will, i.e. fears and needs and wants. And that’s where writing comes in. Because all my writing is about people (how can it be otherwise). So when I’m reading tracks while lost in the physical world, they often lead through people who inhabit my psychological world.
Most writers get that about themselves – that all stories are really people stories – but I think very few writers learn to find the connections to their writing in the physical surroundings of their days. Every day, any day. Instead, they try to isolate their minds from the perceived drudgery of their lives and spin truths wholly out of imagination. Getting lost is a better way. Getting lost lets you set up an outpost where you can gain perspective. You can do it as simply as writing by candlelight in the basement, or in the closet in the middle of the night, or in the bathtub, or on the roof. Or you can go to a real forest and get lost among the trees, which works for me. The minimum thing you want to achieve is to erase the four walls you are looking at but no longer seeing. The maximum thing you are reaching for is an environment that actually inspires you, jangles your senses, awakens awareness, and connects all your circuits with metaphors and imagery. Time for another Cannibal Essay, by way of example. Call it the Walter Mitty Shuffle:
…you are on skinny skis, charting your own map through a new woods. Deer tracks show you the path of least resistance and soon intertwine with known trails where some time in the last two days snowshoes have punched through the crust, creating a Swiss cheese of human tracks to follow. You are warm with exertion, but beyond the woods is a brutal day of minus double-digit temps which high winds have dropped to a number you don’t even want to know. Here in the woods it is very much like the routines of your daily relationships where you mindlessly follow the paths of others, sheltered from risk by immovable old growth towering paternally all around you. Light splinters through the trees, beckoning you to a blinding freedom where life is unscripted and conventions must prove themselves by truth or be discarded as useless to survival. There is beauty there, and pureness, and most of all insight. But you stick to the path, which for all its trampled disfigurement suggests that others have survived if not actually thrived by following it.
Civilization and communication are on this path. God has been defined here. By man. But then, who made the light out there beyond the trees where there is no path if not God? God not defined by man, then – God unscripted, unencumbered by a history written from the POV of one man-made religion or another. It would be a generic God sans intermediaries, totally accessible even to those who walked the Earth before there was such a thing as writing. This is God as First Cause, Prime Mover – a will, a motive for why there should be something as overt as a universe in the first place instead of just nothingness. Would such a God be a polyglot, writing conflicting letters to his constituents with funny marks on parchment? Wouldn’t that miss eons of humans who couldn’t read? Better to communicate a consistent message through nature right from the beginning, don’t you think? The way it’s happening to you now. Written with light for ink (talk about illuminated manuscripts) – a picture book painted with light on the pages of time! A single source in a universal language has its advantages. Out there in the open, free of the shadows and silhouettes that hem the narrow path you are on, you wouldn’t have to pick a path to follow, wouldn’t have to sift through competing theologies, honest errors, lies, good intentions, manipulations and mythologies. No translations necessary. No revised editions of holy Scriptures or changing interpretations. You can be 100% illiterate, and totally isolated, and still learn all the universal truths you need to live by a priori in nature. Because there are no politically correct shades of gray out there where the man-made path stops. White light diffuses evenly into all the colors of the rainbow. So, what will happen if you dare to leave the path and let the spark within you merge with the natural brilliance beyond?
And now the woods thin and you come to the edge of a precipice sweeping
white and veiled as far as you can see in the swirling snow. The path vanishes. Where did it lead before the storm hit? To the left along the edge of the woods? To the right through dunes and scrub? Your instincts tell you that the shortest distance back is straight down the sweeping precipice and into the open maw of the storm. Only, what if you’re wrong? Better to play it safe, turn around and retrace your steps. But the light is so compelling, and sparks are flickering inside you as if something strong and resolute is awakening. The wind gusts impatiently, and you almost hear your name. What is there behind you that is worth spending your life on? Are you going to follow the same path forever? And suddenly you are rocketing down the glazed crust while skeins of wind-driven powder lasso your feet and arctic cold slashes across your face.
10 seconds of soaring, 15, and it is too late to struggle back up the scarp. You are into it now, and it is into you. Recklessly you go to your poles, getting all you can out of momentum until gravity reasserts itself. The disheartening drag of inertia brings you to a halt. There is no calling of your name from the nearly complete white-out now, no sanctioning for what you’ve done, no precedents to guide you. Stubbornly you begin to skate – hard thrusts with your skis, stabbing drives of your poles. You do it endlessly to the point of exhaustion, then you do it some more, and when you glance back your tracks are almost invisible mere yards behind you. Despite the snow pelting into your mouth, you are starting to dehydrate and your muscles are cramping. Each time a pole bends, or a ski breaks through the surface, you risk a sprain or a muscle tear as you lift against the icy crust. Only the angle of the wind gives you a sense of direction, but that is so cutting right through your clothes that you have to tack like a sailboat to lessen the risk of frostbite. And if the wind shifts, will you even know it, or will you just veer in a circle? Suddenly you doubt everything. In a moment of panic, the all-forgiving grace of near-death and certain doom comes over you. Physics isn’t working. The geometry of who you are, where you are and where you should be is all scrambled.
But then the rushing surf of snow around your skis parts and you see faint tracks – animal tracks. A dog, a wolf, coyote? No matter. Something less dominant than you is out here, surviving, adapting by using all its cunning and capacity. It is living to the max. And so are you. This is who you are. Not who you were forty minutes ago, following the narrow path of the herd. And this is where you should be at this moment in time. You almost laugh at the irony of your situation. Because whatever the peril (and realistically it is minute), you are as good as dead for far too much of your life already, for the most part merely existing in sheltered conformity, living far below your capacities, following prescribed paths day and night that sacrifice your individuality.
The lee of a rise and the fickleness of the wind have allowed these tracks to remain, but you see now that the storm is also thinning. To your right, there are trees and a break that might provide a shortcut. And then you recognize dried husks sticking out of the snow that in summer would grow on the edge of a pond, and so you turn away. No year-round access would lead through water. Instead you skate up the rise, and – presto – there are the tracks again. Inspired by your correct decision, a rush of bravado drives you over the crest. For a few minutes you ski pell-mell into oblivion, and then the white room descends around you once more and hopelessness returns. Take a lesson. Arrogance can be fatal. Is that your Achilles’ heel in the world of human interactions too?
You skate on blindly, steering by the wind and a vague sense of where the sun might be in the dense overhang of mist and snow. How you would welcome your traditional antagonists out here now! Like the yahoos who fire guns willy-nilly in the woods. Shoot at me, please, so I can follow the sound. Or the snowtoilets. That’s what you call snowmobiles that roar up and down trails marked NO MOTORIZED VEHICLES, sometimes missing you by only inches. I.e., what makes gaseous noises, spreads noxious fumes, and all you do is sit on it? Um…a toilet? No – wait, a snowmobile! Snowtoilets. Only, you wish one would come rescue you now. What a hypocrite you are! Take another lesson in survival: different strokes for different folks.
As if the god of humility is rewarding your epiphany, the windblown snow suddenly swirls into a pair of snow devils that sashay out of your way. Exit stage left. And in its place there are the animal tracks! Out here a dog would be accompanied by a human, you decide, neither are the tracks far enough apart to be a wolf’s, or anywhere near the size of a cougar’s. A coyote’s, then. A male marking his territory, it becomes evident, by the configuration of tracks around periodic archipelagoes of yellow snow. A well-ranged, keen-sensed, wonderful creature left these, and in so doing taught you the difference between making tracks in pursuit of individual fulfillment and following a one-size-fits-all path. But it was not an either/or choice – it did not exclude the path – because now you see that this instinctual creature found the safety of the woods just before the storm closed in. That woods. The one rising in the distance, split by a clear trail. And thus you are indebted to your inner light as you must be every day that you wish to grow, to learn, to mirror back wisdom and beauty. If you can manage to get lost for a bit, inspiration will find you. Disguised, to be sure, but if you have the courage to leave the beaten path and trust your purest instincts, you will be able to read it, even if it’s written in white light and coyote pee.
It was too cold to take photos during the adventure described above, but I’ve included pictures from similar days in my latest newsletter. I’ll be happy to send you a Sullygram once a month if you e-mail me at mn333mn@earthlink.net . I’m also on Twitter and YouTube. The YouTube is kind of a joke, as I was dared to come out of the closet with the sax (sax, not sex). A sample: http://www.youtube.com/user/Sullysax1#p/a/u/1/d49rY3FQ5ic . Please feel free to hit the Subscribe button at that link to be notified of new videos.
Your thoughts are welcome, your attention valued.
Thomas “Sully” Sullivan
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If something has to be kept secret, it must be true. Secrets are self-proving. Lies are loud and wear red hats.
Dear Muse, may I write today words that are worth 1000 pictures.
“Don’t expect too much” is a self-fulfilling prophecy for accepting too little.