I admire flowers, I project all kinds of admirable things onto them. They live gloriously and with vibrant color, they die with character and acceptance. I am beginning to see some changes in the light and the air, summer is still upon us, but the flowers tell me Autumn is gathering itself. My favorite time.
The idea of life after death, for us, for our animals, does not appeal to me. I am not walking over any Rainbow Bridge to play with a bunch of border collies for all eternity. I wouldn’t do anything so cruel and selfish to them, they deserve more. For me, the promise of life after death is a distraction, it keeps me from appreciating the uniqueness and beauty of life right her and right now.
This is the moment I am living, this is my time. If I think that when I die Maria will be there and I will live with her forever, I might not appreciate the wonderful moments, the significant and lasting moments, that I share with her here on earth. The same is true of the animals that I love with, of my dogs.
Every moment is unique, precious, if I am conscious of it, if I am awake and open to the moment. I sometimes fail at this, but I sometimes succeed. The story of life, yes? The promise of death gives life it’s poignancy, and an awareness of the meaning of time and the importance of compassion. This belief challenges me to focus on what I have now, not what I might have in the future. I hope everyone is happy in heaven, but I wish to be happy here, now.
Donald Trump has given me a valuable gift, he has reminded me that time is precious, that a spiritual life requires discipline and consistency, that it is essential to understand distraction of we are ever to find any kind of inner peace. He is helping me to claim my precious afternoons.
I love H. L. Mencken, the grumpy media and social observer who wrote about the great boobs and hustlers and charlatans of American politics, he called them “Boobus Americanus” and said there are always enough dumb and angry people in our country to keep them in business. The function of American business, he said (this was before the corporate era) was to screw most of the people, and from time to time, the people wake up to it and get ticked off and turn to some loud mouth rascal who claims to speak for their true interests, and perhaps does.
He would have so loved to see Trump and write about him, I have to confess to being pretty mesmerized myself.
We may not see the like for some time, and I think I completely get him. By dint of his big and foul mouth, he seems brave and alive next to the tepid and cowardly opportunists along side of him, hollow men and women all. They are doing polished theater and he is doing improv theater, yet he seems to be the only one who is actually alive. Hateful things come out of his mouth, yet he doesn’t seem as hateful as most of his more polite colleagues, and that is a fascinating thing.
Some personalities are just wondrously and uniquely American, they could not exist anywhere else. I’ve been to England a few times, and I just can’t fathom Trump leading any political poll there. But back to the point. Trump has helped me to see that I have lost control of my afternoons, and need to get them back.
“The whole aim of practical politics,” wrote Mencken more than a half century ago, “is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary.”
How prescient. That is also the story of modern media and much of corporate life in America today. Yesterday afternoon, done writing, I sat down with my Iphone and earphones and a beautiful novel, Infinite Home by Kathleen Alcott. It was around 6 p.m., I had worked hard all day and I have long flirted with the idea of a late afternoon spiritual hour, a time of meditation, reading and listening to music. I have wanted to do it for years, I have yet to do it. I was eager to do it yesterday.
Why not, I often wonder? Because I am too prone to distraction, a great spiritual failing.
Instead of reading my book yesterday or listening to my music, or settling to mediate (Red loves to meditate quietly with me, Fate is not yet this evolved, and she is with Maria most of the day), I picked up my Ipad and read a long and quite intelligent analysis of the Trump phenomenon and what it says about him and the rest of us that he is still so popular.
I can’t say I learned one thing about him, and upon reflection, I can’t say that I really care either. Whatever I am reading about in six months, it is not likely to be Donald Trump, and if he is still around, I’ve already read enough. He is loud and colorful, but when you get to the next level, there is no next level.
A half hour later, finishing my reading, I realized I had given away my afternoon. If you read Mencken, you will know that Trump is not new or different from any of the other boobs and barkers that have shaken up American politics from time to time – Long, McCarthy, Bryan, Wallace. He is fascinating, but just not that important. Why did I give up my afternoon hour for this?
I realized this morning, lying awake in bed, that I have lost control of my afternoons. I unconsciously slipped into a number of different patterns – anxiety and distraction will do this. I get up early to write and write for hours in the morning. I need to do my chores, run errands, answer messages, do my sheepherding. After that, I am free, especially in the hour or so before I make dinner.
I love to read and listen to music, I find I am rarely doing that at all. It is so easy to pick up the Ipad or browse through the smart phone, there are always texts, messages, stories, photos, videos, news. A boon to people like me, with a fractured mind.
I saw that in the afternoons, I was in danger of becoming the person Pope Francis cautioned about when he wrote in his encyclical that “Many people today sense a profound imbalance which drives them to frenetic activity and makes them feel busy, in a constant hurry which in turns leads them to ride roughshod over everything around them. Nature is filled with words of love, but how can we listen to them, amid constant noise, interminable and nerve-wracking distractions, or the cult of appearances?”
Did the Pope foresee Donald Trump, the loudest nerve-wracking distraction of all, the leader of the cult of appearances, and did he imagine me giving up my sweet and contemplative hour to be distracted by him?
Not today, not again. Here is my plan for today. After making lunch, blogging, working a bit on my book, giving Fate a quick sheepherding lesson, checking on the animals, feeding the dogs, it will be about 5 p.m. I take my Joseph Campbell book, The Art of Life, the Pope’s Encyclical, “Laudato Si,” Infinite Home, and I will go to the Round House Cafe.
There, I will order an Iced Decaf Coffee and a muffin, I will sit at a quiet table in the rear of the cafe and read my books. I will bring my Iphone and maybe listen to some music in between. I will have my hour, today and from now on.
Mr. Trump reminded me that he is not my business, and has little or nothing to do with my life. I don’t care to be alarmed or made clamorous by yet one more cynical and cruel windbag. If I do, that is my fault, not his. He is quite honest and open about who he is, and a number of people seem to care for him and message. Our politicians are so weak-minded and timid and cynical that even hate and stupidity seems stirring in comparison.
Good luck to them all, perhaps they will eat one another.
So I am moved to get my hour back, and to keep it, every day that I can. Stay tuned. Every hour I do this will be a big seed for inner peace. That’s how spirituality works. I may call it the Trump Hour, just to keep me motivated.
Red and I go to the gym together several times a week. Red is nine now, I just turned 68.
I notice that both of us walk a bit stiffly after a round of sheepherding and hill-climbing. Or a workout at the gym. Red is the perfect aging companion for a man, he doesn’t talk about his health and loves to lie around. He also has made friends with the pharmacist, as I have.
When you are friends with the pharmacist, you are beginning to be old.
When I go to the gym with Red, I sometimes think about getting old, and how I will die. I don’t expect to die anytime soon, but it doesn’t seem as remote as it used to.
My plan has always been to find a way to take my own life when I feel myself crossing a point in time that I will see and understand. I imagine lots of people have that idea, but they get too feeble and helpless to do it. Several good friends of mine have taken their own lives. One of them was Paul Moshimer, just a few months ago, he left a train of anger and sorrow in his wake.
I always thought I might do it in my late 70’s or early 80’s, but the arrival of Maria in my life has clouded that plan. She has some strong feelings about it, and suggests it is a selfish thought, and it’s true, I might not be so willing to leave the world behind as long as she is around. I have suggested we go together, but that ticks her off even more.
When I was a mystery writer – the much praised and spectacularly unsuccessful Suburban Detective series –I had a good friend, her name was Carolyn, she wrote very smart and successful mysteries, she and her character were both outspoken feminists. She was a good deal older than I was, but we often ran into each other on the mystery book circuit.
Back then, groups of mystery writers would travel together, we’d do evening readings together all over the country in those wonderful dingy mystery bookstores that vanished in the Barnes & Noble, pre-Amazon era. There are still a few left, and not too many Barnes & Noble stores either, but they are hanging on by a thread. We had no money and neither did the bookstore owners, we writers would often sleep on cots in their book storage rooms. If we were lucky, and they were nice, we’d get pasta or pizza for dinner. Mostly, we ate at McDonald’s. If there were four or five writers, we might drawn a dozen people, we always had time to talk.
My friend and I liked one another, we spent a lot of time talking about life on those long rides and in those often empty shops, she was very real and direct. I love that in friends, it is rare. She told me she planned to take her own life when she began to feel old, she would do it before she began to fail in a serious way. She was not surrendering herself to the American system of cruel death, by which she meant withering away and dying in a nursing home, or having some doctor pounding her chest or breaking her ribs in a failed effort to keep her alive for no other reason than that they could. She would not, she said, live a life of pills and visits to the pharmacy.
This was something her detective character might have said, both were feisty.
The American health care system, Carolyn said, is greedy and heartless, it does not allow people to die gracefully or gently, they just keep going and going. If you submit the process, she said, you will die a poor death. She wouldn’t, she said.
Her fears were justified then, it is even more true now, as new technology keeps people alive longer and longer without much consideration of quality of life. And even more greedy and heartless.
I knew that Carolyn was serious about her life, and honest about her plans, but she was full of life and energy, I didn’t think much about her promise until I picked up the newspaper one day and read that she had gone to a cabin in the woods, swallowed some pills, and committed suicide. She was true to her word. Her husband knew what she was doing and supported her decision. She died at the top of her life, happily married, in good health, respected and successful. That, she always told me, was how she meant to go.
A few days later, I got a final letter from her, she wrote a personal message to some of us explaining her decision, wishing us good luck, telling us she loved each one of us. “I did not wish to grow old in that other way,” she said. “I wanted to take charge of it and leave the world in my way, with dignity and comfort.” It was a gracious goodbye. She did not apologize, and I admired her for that. Most of her friends were furious at her, and some still are. She had no right to do that, they said. She was selfish and narrow-minded.
She had so much more life to live.
I didn’t feel that way. She had every right to do it, I thought, she owned her own life, it was for her to decide how to end it. She had thought about it carefully.
Recently, I lost another friend to suicide, Paul Moshimer. He died a very different death, no messages, discussions. He just went out and hung himself from a beautiful old tree. It seems he never discussed it with anyone, there were no letters or messages, just a lot of people who loved him struggling to make sense of it, fending off anger and confusion and hurt.
I was one of them. I don’t know why, but I didn’t feel the same way about his death that I felt about my writer friend. I appreciated that she took the trouble to tell me what she was thinking and say goodbye. I didn’t have to wonder why. I don’t blame Paul for what he did, it was just more difficult for me to understand. That, I suppose, is selfish. He owed me nothing, he was in a lot of pain.
“They tell us that suicide is the greatest piece of cowardice,” wrote Arthur Schopenhauer, the great German philosopher, “that suicide is wrong; when it is quite obvious that there is nothing in the world to which every man has a more unassailable title than to his own life and person”
I don’t think much about growing older, the truth is I don’t feel very old. The gym is a place where I do think of being old, and where I do feel old. I love my gym, Red and I are often alone there. Sometimes, I feel some melancholy there, I get reflective. I am almost always the oldest person there, and the kids on the machines next to me make me feel like Methusaleh, who lived to be nearly 1,000. I always seem to be standing still on my treadmill, the world seems to be running past me on all sides. I don’t even go near the weights.
The gym is good for me, but not for my big ego. I am never more aware of where I am than when I am on those machines, seeing everywhere what it means to be young.
And when my sneakers come untied, as they often do, some very sweet young man or woman always comes over to tie them for me, they do not want me tripping and falling. Why don’t their sneakers ever come untied, I wonder?
In the gym today, I thought of my friend Carolyn and I thought of my friend Paul. I honor them.
I will also decide how to leave the world, I won’t leave it to the doctors or bureaucrats or politicians. Or even to Maria. It is, after all, my life.
I had nothing to say about how and where I was brought into the world, but I have everything to say about how I leave it.
And I would support you, said Maria, after reading this piece. “As long as you’re not being a jerk about it.”