“As Worthy As The Gift That Can’t Be Sought”

I.

At a certain vantage point,
In a certain light,
Maybe I look alright to you.
Don’t let that distract you,
Don’t let that part attract you,
It’s only a trick of the light.
 
You speak my language,
Which is why I haven’t heard you say a word.
They told you to focus on the positive,
But you know if you do that you’ll just get bored.
The world is a whole lot more interesting
When you see the whole of it.
Good and bad, joy and sorrow,
Don’t flee from the ultimate.
 
You wish there was something that could demysticate the mystical:
Domesticate the wild,
Force the adult out of the child.
You want something that will make it all clear,
But don’t be intimidated by what stays in the shadows,
By the silence that is harder to hear.
You fear what is not revealed,
What stays hidden, concealed.
 
Listen, if it was easy to find it wouldn’t be worth searching for.
If it was free to enter, there would be no use in having a door.
 
II.

There are beautiful things, like the piano that sounds the aching heart;
And ugly things, like the way you’ve been hurt from the start.
It is ugly when no one hears the lone hobo’s moan,
But beautiful the way you dance for yourself alone.
 
You’re a kindred spirit,
So don’t be afraid.
The world is harsh to those who hear it,
Hear the yearning, hear the pain,
Hear what is never spoken,
Hear what cannot be expressed or learned.
But here, take this simple token,
To remember that others feel the same.
 
I know you are looking for that piercing line,
The truth hidden underneath the lies.
But when it’s dark and you look out the window
Don’t you see a reflection of yourself?
Don’t you know there is nothing else?
Inside, outside:
There’s never been a difference.
It’s so simple yet so insidious.
I’ll share with you something,
I’ll share with you my precious time,
Which is not so precious and not so much mine.
 
I know it hurts you that the world laughs when you’re brave enough to cry,
But think of the beautiful things, like the startling clarity of the desert sky.
It’s an ugly disguise that you’re forced to put on to hide your mourning,
But nothing can conceal the beauty of the stillness in the early morning.
 
You’re a kindred spirit,
So don’t be afraid.
The world is harsh to those who hear it,
Hear the yearning, hear the pain.

Be aware of the walls
And watch them crumble before you,
As you stumble upon a recognition
That you aren’t quite as worthless as you once thought,
That you are as worthy as the gift that can’t be sought.

Wanderings in Phoenix

I and two friends drive down to Phoenix. I drop them off at the airport. As I drive off, after the hugs and goodbyes, I feel the type of sadness that comes from love. I park in a mostly empty lot and wander the city alone.

The one good thing about being alone in a city is the feeling you get that you are invisible. Not ideal for a life, but good for a few days. Not a part of the city, not apart from it. In it, as an observer rather than as a participant. A front seat to the insanity. I don’t mind being around a lot of people, as long as I know I’m not really among them. An outsider by choice. Outside of the CVS there is neatly cut grass and a couple of oak trees, I’m not sure which type. A man shouts at his two kids to get back in sight. They are frolicking on the grass, distracting a college-aged kid who is reading in one of the white chairs on the green grass.

“C’mon! You can’t go over there!” the man yells.

Phoenix would be ideal this time of year for a hobo. And a hobo I always will be. The nights are perfect, if you’re into doomsdays. I doubt it gets much below 60. Apparently in a couple years it’ll be 90 at nights here in the summer. The temperature is rising, the people are getting colder.

“You stay where I can see you!” the father shouts at his children.

So many sounds to pay attention to in the city. I hear that song that goes,

Sometimes I get a feeling / That I never never had before.”

               It’s coming from the Lucky Strike bowling alley above the CVS. There is a song I can’t quite make out coming from the Verizon store next door. In the CVS that song “Bad Day” is playing. Another song is coming out of the Gypsy Bar above the Verizon store. A bus pulls away loudly from the curb to my left, past the square; the kids yell as they play tag, their dad yells at them to stop playing tag. Another bus zooms off. A group of four guys who would probably be considered hipsters walk by, smoking cigarettes sullenly. Tight jeans.

If I lived in the city I would drink too much coffee, probably start smoking cigarettes as well. Either that or I would work out or run obsessively, until I injured myself through overuse. Something to counter the lethargy and weariness I know I would feel after too long in this type of environment. Or I’d just bike everywhere. The city on the bike would be exciting: dodging traffic, recklessly fast in the center of the road. Some sort of physical adventure in the midst of all this concrete, all these machines. Something to feel like a human being again.

               A junkie asks me if I have change. I give her 30 cents. Then I ask her how long she’s lived in Phoenix.

“6 years.”

“Do you like it?”

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Travels in Ireland: Native Ground

A couple years ago I spent a few weeks traveling in Ireland. The homeland.

As I travel in Ireland I revel in the extremes, unable to find or simply not looking for the in-between. I drink too much too often. I read too many books that only add to my restlessness: Kerouac, Steinbeck, Joyce, Abbey, Thoreau, Hesse. I listen and dance with wild abandon to traditional Irish folk music, feeling a nostalgia for something I have never possessed and that cannot be possessed, something that was lost long before I knew I had to find it. I walk the hills with their eight or more shades of green. I feel a wandering vagabond love for these people I am descended from, these people who have been beaten down by the British, by famine, by Jameson, by poverty. Beaten down but never all the way down, only ever far enough down to get in touch with their inner melancholy, their yearning. Far enough down to get in touch with their core, finding creativity and meaning in those depths, music and art to raise them up again.

My first night in Dublin I recite a poem in a dimly lit basement bar. In the crowded Temple Bar Square musicians play standard karaoke tunes for the benefit of the tourists, who are mostly Americans. Here is something different. Some people read exquisitely wrought personal poems, others sing songs written by the poetic songwriters: Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, Van Morrison. This is how I’d imagined Ireland; here is the reality to match my dream. In this bar people do not seek to escape their discomfort by drinking themselves into oblivion; instead they sit with their feelings of discontent, try to understand them, use what little understanding they gain to connect with other people who feel the same way. As someone who knows what the search for oblivion looks like, I feel the difference here.

I recite a poem I had written about some struggles I had had the previous year in college. This one: http://bmlontheroad.blogspot.com/2011/10/story-of-man.html

When I am finished the bartender says,  “Welcome home. What’s your second name? I tell him it is McCloskey, which is my middle name and my mom’s name and so not an altogether dishonest answer.

The next morning I leave town on the earliest train and head out to the country. I camp that night on the top of a hill somewhere in county Waterford, cooking my food on a small fire I built with little twigs and leaves. I eat the food; then I sit and listen. I listen to the Clare cuckoos, to the wind that makes sleep difficult, to the sheep I share the hill with. I would look again in the cities for the type of connection I had found in that bar, but I would always return to the places you could never fully return from, the places where you could not help but be changed, the transformative places

Restless but not rootless, I would get back to my roots in wild country, feeling most fulfilled in the empty places, instilled with a sense of the beauty of unfilled spaces, stilled and unhurried places.

Listening, sitting with the discomfort, the discontent. Not hiding here alone on the top of the hill; rather, trying to find above what is hidden below, what is often hidden in the towns and with others. I like to spend time alone because you can’t hide from yourself when you are alone. There is something freeing about sharing loneliness together with other people, sharing pain and sorrow, joy and love. That was how it was in the bar the night before. But there is also something equally freeing about leaving the places where the people are lonely, leaving the bars, fleeing town like a released criminal flees prison, getting back to the unpeopled hills and trails.

Back to the roots, before they get rusted. Maybe I would never find a permanent place that I could call home. Maybe I would always wander, feeling at home  sometimes, feeling like a stranger other times. I remember feeling at home in Ireland, both when I was among people with good hearts and souls who felt strong emotions, and when I was alone in the green hills with the cows and the sheep and the cuckoos.

The next morning I wake before the dawn and hike down the hill, entering the town of Lismore, where there is a travel writing festival. There I meet and stay with Catherine and Jan, the couple who organize the festival each year, for the two nights I am in town. They see that I am a lone traveler and welcome me into their cozy house; they bring me down to the bar on Saturday night, where I tingle with happy draughts of Guinness and mingle with the happy lot who frequent the bar.

I feel accepted into the congenial atmosphere, and grateful to Catherine and Jan for allowing me a special peek at Irish pub life that I otherwise would never have experienced.

I had listened to the nonhuman elements on the hill the night before, now I listen to the human stories. I talk with the Irish travel writer Paul Clements who had led a workshop earlier in the day that I had attended.

We had gone up The Vee Road outside of town and made ‘nibble notes’ on the landscape there. Back in town, Clements told us that the number one rule in writing is that there are no rules, that writing is a profession with no masters. That stayed with me, it is the main point I remember from the workshop. The only rule is that there are no rules. I was writing a book at the time that would be called The Rules of the Road, about a bike trip I had gone on. I jotted that rule down; it would end up being the last sentence of the book.

He leaves late that night; I am the only one who catches a glimpse of him as he slips quietly out of the bar, without a word or a backward glance.Clements had written a book about hiking to the highest peaks in each county in Ireland. In the bar I ask him who his favorite authors are. Thoreau and Abbey are two, those advocates who lived in different times, one hundred years apart, but insisted on the same things: solitude, wilderness, civil disobedience. They are two of my favorite authors as well. He tells me when the bar closes he is going to start walking. He is planning on walking to Belfast, over two hundred miles away. Although more than twice my age, he is no less of a wanderer. He is no more settled; age has done nothing to settle his restlessness. I understand the impulse to walk somewhere far away, a sauntering pilgrimage to some holy land, for no other reason than it is there, and walking is the best way to get there; I know that longing even if I don’t always know the reasons behind it. I think of asking him if I can join and walk with him, but I figure this is something he has to do alone.

I wake up early and do the same, slipping out in the welcome silence and darkness, leaving Catherine and Jan a note, thanking them for their kindness, for welcoming me into their home

The town is empty, the drinkers have all gone to sleep, the workers who are probably also the drinkers have not yet risen.The streets are empty and dark; the sky is full of light. The frantic energy of the human world is temporarily stilled; the stillness of the inhuman world is for a short time restored. I walk the deserted streets and am not booked for vagrancy. I hum along with the birds and am not looked at askance. Nothing rankles, no chains bind my ankles, I am free to do a little footloose jig to the silent music of these lonely hours. I do so. “We must risk delight,” writes Jack Gilbert. I take that risk.

I leave town and walk back up the hill, and then down the other side, heading off to somewhere new, alone in the pre-dawn twilight of the homeland, walking on native ground.