Hola Everybody,
I have a few job interviews set for this week, one being a second interview. I don’t pray, but you should pray for me. LOL
I have a few job interviews set for this week, one being a second interview. I don’t pray, but you should pray for me. LOL
The Myth of Freedom
Falling Water, house designed by Frank Lloyd Wright |
A man is either
free or he is not. There cannot be any apprenticeship for freedom.
-- Imamu Amiri Baraka (1934 - 2014)
-- Imamu Amiri Baraka (1934 - 2014)
Many years ago I once became lost
in a national park in Connecticut. I was in my late teens-early 20s and a
busload of us city kids planned a trip, and we all trekked up to some park in
Armpit, USA. I am a dyed-in-the-wool city boy. And when I say city, I mean city.
Please, I’ve traveled around this country and some places that use the term are
laughable. Yes, I am a NYC snob: for a long time I considered anything above 14th
street Hicksville. Anyway, I grew up in the city and the first time I saw a pig
live, I thought it was a cow! When I thought of pigs, what came to mind was
that pig Arnold from the 1960s TV sitcom, Green Acres.
Whatever…
Anyway, as soon as we reached our
camp site, always the adventurous one, I convinced another poor soul to go
exploring with me. Long story short: we became lost for close to 48 hours. What
happened was that we kept walking in circles. There was this lake not too far
from the camp, you see, and I (being the Brainiac of the two) decided if we
followed the lakeshore, we would eventually end up where we started.
The thing
was we kept walking in circles, not around the lake, but within a
confined space. We realized this after hours of walking because we kept seeing
a rock formation that looked eerily familiar. The reason for that was that it was
the same rock formation! By this time, it had gotten dark and there was a
pronounced early October chill. To compound matters, my poor friend had
inadvertently fallen into a cascade that hid a cave and he was freezing. After
a little deliberation, we came to the conclusion that the cave was the best
place to stay for the night.
We had nothing -- no matches,
flashlight, compass, food, nothing. Even if we had a compass I doubt we would
know how to use it. Eventually, we had to stop because of that annoying country
tendency towards complete darkness. I mean, you can’t even see your own hand in
front of your face. Fuck! To make matters worse, I swore I heard a wolf’s howl.
I’m serious! Now, I don’t know if wolves actually exist in some Connecticut
state park, but to this day, I swear I heard a howl. In addition, I didn’t make
things better by voicing my conviction that the cave we had taken refuge in was
very likely some Grizzly bear’s home.
So, there were, hungry, cold, fearful,
and lost.
the next day we somehow found our
way to a road, and by then our people had a whole posse looking for us, which
ruined the trip for everyone else. We walked down the road until we came upon
some ranger in a car who then proceeded to ask us if we had seen two Puerto
Rican kids walking around lost… DUH?!?! Hellloooo?! Fuckin’ hicks…
Of course, being philosophically
inclined, I found all sorts of metaphors and meaning behind our little
adventure, while my companion, who was freezing to death, cursed me the whole
time. Still, it fascinated me that left to our own devices, we kept walking
around in circles. Shit, we tried to walk differently, making lefts,
where we had previously made rights, and still we walked in circles. What does
that say about our own habitual patterns, I asked my friend, as he conjured new
swear words for my edification.
For the next fifteen years of my
life, that incident was to become a metaphor for how I lived: doing what I
wanted, how I wanted, when I wanted, and mistaking that for freedom. I think
many people mistake “following their bliss” for freedom when in actuality
walking around in circles without a compass is the ultimate prison. It’s the
ultimate prison because though we can’t see the bars, they exist as surely as
real prison bars. In a very real sense, we’re all “doing time,” in some way or
another.
True freedom, for me anyway, takes
practice. Actually, it takes a set of practices that serve as a guideline and
map to freedom. Walk around rudderless without direction long enough and you’ll
find you’re creating the same mess repeatedly.
Habitual Patterns
I like to say that I became free
while I was incarcerated and this is very true. Many years after that incident
in the woods, I was incarcerated at a maximum-security facility. I’m not proud
of that, but I have to admit there’s some irony in this story -- at least for
me there is -- so I find some humor in all this now. It was early spring, my
favorite time of the year, and I was in a prison yard looking at some mountains
and feeling really depressed about being locked up.
Then it hit me... I was actually
free. Just like that! I realized that though the state could control and
confine my body, only I could give the permission to imprison my mind. It may
not sound like a lot to you, but for me it was transformative experience. The
fact that I could choose to be free no matter where I found myself blew
me away.
Looking back, I understand now that
it didn’t happen all at once, that my epiphany that day wasn’t something
spontaneous. I understand now, my realization came about because of the work I
had put in, but it hit me that day like a bolt of lightning in the middle of a
completely dark country night: I was free. Free, right then, at that very
moment.
It was amazing. I could choose to
be free! This couldn’t be true. Nevertheless, I felt it in the very fiber of my
being, this freedom was real, alive, a part of me, a part of my heritage as a
human being. When I went back to my cell later that day, I shared my revelation
with my neighbors and they all started laughing at me. They were, like, “Eddie,
you in prison, bro.”
And they were correct, of course, at
the gross (vs. subtle) level
of reality, I was incarcerated. However, my realization was that
while I could be coerced into prison physically, only I could give another
permission to incarcerate my heart and mind. What I saw clearly for the first
time that day was that I was giving the prison authorities this permission to
take my mind, to imprison my heart. From that day on, I became free and my
life, even within the prison walls, changed dramatically. I no longer felt at
the mercy of sadistic prison guards or all the other insanity that goes on in
prison. From that day on, I was free -- really free -- and all my
interactions reflected this realized freedom. What happened was that people
began responding to me differently: guards, who previously were able to press
my buttons, didn’t know how to deal with the newer, free me, for example, leaving
them confused and anxious.
Other people incarcerated with me
would ask why I looked different: was I exercising more, did I gain weight?
Eventually, my freedom permeated my immediate surroundings and those in contact
with me began doing their own inner work, in the process transforming our
collective prison experience. The effect was so palpable that I was eventually
transferred from that location because I was deemed too dangerous. But by then
it was too late, even in solitary confinement, they couldn’t take my freedom
away.
I became free that early spring day
and though there are times I choose to give up my freedom -- especially when I
come into contact with people with hate in their hearts -- I have chosen
freedom more often than not these past 25 years. My personal liberation, I have
found, is not individual, dedicated solely to me, but instead it comes with a
responsibility and an awareness that it affects everything around me. That
other prison we all share, the myth that we are separate from others, has also
dissolved and as a result your personal liberation is also important to me.
Ultimately, I have learned that my
freedom demands I choose happiness. I never even knew I had that choice. It is
my responsibility as a human being, actually, this choice. This is why I always
say that everything we ever need for our happiness exists right here, right
now, this very moment… this very life. This is true whether your prison is made
of concrete and bars or psychic defilements.
My name is Eddie and I’m in
recovery from civilization…
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