Try

The crepe myrtles near the street did not get trimmed as I intended in February, thanks to my mind being on other things. Despite that oversight, the largest of the street-side trees/bushes display beautiful, bright red—almost cherry-red—flowers. Had the plants been trimmed, the volume and density of flowers would have been much greater, no doubt; but they are just fine, anyway. The damage to the forest around us, from the March tornado, will be with us for a long, long time. Eventually, though, the hundreds of fallen trees and broken branches will decay and join thousands upon thousands of pounds of leaf litter, becoming nutrient-rich soil to feed the forest flora. We have to give nature time to heal self-inflicted wounds.

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The tools of serenity can include a magnifying glass, microscope, digital camera, net, pooter, chloroform jar, and a mounting board with pins. Those would be tools of the serene lepidopterologist; a person whose intense studies of butterflies brings about an overwhelming sense of tranquility. A serene herpetologist, a person who studies turtles with the same ultimate outcome, might need similar tools as well as some specialty tools. A serene dendrologist, one in whom serenity accompanies the pursuit of knowledge about wood science, might require a microtome to cut very thin slices of wood for microscopic examination.  But the single tool of serenity that is absolutely required in all of these endeavors and every other—no option—is intense, unwavering focus. That singular focus must be powerful enough to prevent the bombardment of unwanted and irrelevant information from sabotaging the peace those practices bring. Information about wildfires, terrorism, political assassinations, airplane crashes, child abuse, dependency on dangerous drugs, domestic violence, relationship failures, train crashes, fatal diseases, and a million other emotional or intellectual intrusions cannot be permitted to infect one’s thoughts or otherwise divert one’s exclusive focus. Even thoughts actively meant to eliminate those intrusions cannot be allowed, nor can serenity be the objective—serenity is the byproduct, not the target. Yet serenity may indeed be the purpose of meditation, for example. Focus. Intense focus. Pure concentration on…something…is the key. But, perhaps, not always. Maybe the routes to serenity are multi-fold. Serenity may be an amorphous idea that takes its shape from its context. In that case, everything I have claimed could be wrong…or incompletely right. My original point was that laser-like focus on a matter or subject of intense personal interest and pleasure may lead to serenity. Studying butterflies or turtles or woody plants, for example. Serenity, though, is unique to the individual. Those few who have achieved serenity, however brief, probably would confirm that fact.

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Relax. That’s worth a try.

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Wading

Just as walking through the lobby of a swank hotel with a dagger clinched between one’s  jaws is not necessarily threatening to the hotel’s patrons, revealing one’s harmless curiosity about another person’s private thoughts or behaviors can appear anything but innocuous. Innocent interest may be mistaken for unhealthy, unhinged, menacing psychopathy. Flamboyant behavior might incorrectly be read as a signal that the person exhibiting it is about to launch into a murderous frenzy. Most of us realize flamboyant behavior can be upsetting to observers; but we might not be capable of properly distinguishing the occasionally vague line between curiosity and prurience. That being the case, people tend to rein in their curiosity, for fear of being mislabeled and/or misunderstood. That is a shame, because knowing innocent but intimate details of how and what a person thinks can create a powerfully comfortable familiarity. Suspicion about whether questions suggest sinister motives hinders honesty. We do not allow ourselves to ask questions that are too personal and we avoid answering such questions posed to us. We hide ourselves and hide from others. Revealing too much of ourselves, we think, is dangerous; knowing too much about others is equally perilous. Perhaps the only safe way to satisfy one’s curiosity about others is to place them under hypnosis before questioning them about their most intimate thoughts and emotions. But that does not sound especially safe, does it?

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I had planned to join men from church for coffee and breakfast this morning, but I am not quite in the mood for conversation. I have missed many, many Thursday morning gatherings, thanks in large part to doctor visits, chemo treatments, and/or reactions to treatments. Today is one of the few Thursdays I could go, but my mood today calls for solitude this morning. We plan to go to a wine dinner this evening and I hope and expect to go to church on Sunday to listen to our church pianist discuss his personal history. Beyond that, I think the next week will be quiet. My next chemo treatment is scheduled for next Thursday; if my experience is like the last one, I’ll be extremely tired, achy, and dealing with annoying but tolerable pain for several days thereafter. Chemo makes me feel worn out for days and days, though for some reason I feel quite good for a few intermittent days between fatigue and gloom. Still, I have it pretty easy compared to many people who must suffer through far more excruciating experiences than I. I try to keep reminding myself of that fact so I can avoid indulging in undeserved self-pity.

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A shroud of fog envelopes the forest around our house this morning. I am glad the sun is hidden by the fog and clouds. Gloomy days like this one, so far, can feel far more comforting than mornings emblazoned with bright sunshine. Those kinds of days, which attempt to demand cheerfulness and sparkling energy, sometimes are hard to take. Dull grey days that echo my mood are friendlier and more understanding and accommodating.

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Depression is rage spread thin.

~ George Santayana ~

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We’ve lately been watching a series (Wire in the Blood) on Acorn TV that stars Hermione Norris. A British police action/drama series, we came across it while I was looking for Scandinavian crime dramas (I’ve been missing them…). I would not call it a favorite, but it has kept my attention. Seeing the star’s first name, Hermione, triggered a vague memory from my late teenage years or early adult years (a wide span, but that’s as close as I can get to precision), in which one of my brothers brought a chicken named Hermione to the house. My memory tells me Hermione was temporarily held in a metal garbage can one day and my brother, the chicken master, taunted another brother by telling him Hermione was an aggressive, dangerous chicken. My memories rarely are entirely reliable, though.

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Three hours into it, I will now wade through the rest of the day.

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Strata

StoryCorps, one of the many programs I listen to on NPR, almost invariably moves me emotionally. Simple stories that emphasize the importance and value of human connections tend to make me focus on important matters that are easy to overlook in the chaos of daily life. I listened this morning to a couple of StoryCorps programs. One involved a former inmate, now a death doula, who spoke of his purpose for taking on the role. Another one involved sisters Mai Lo Lee and Beth Lo, who grew up in a large Hmong family on a ginseng farm in Wisconsin after their family escaped the horrors of the war in Viet Nam. Short snippets in which scenes from the past are revealed to have thought-provoking meaning can keep my mind occupied for days on end, trying to understand how brief stories can impact me so thoroughly.

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Roughly seven months have passed since I learned that my lung cancer had returned after five years of “clear” CT scans and blood tests. I think it was less than a month earlier that I had my chemo port removed from the left side of my chest. A few weeks later, I had a new report installed in the right side of my chest to replace the one that had recently been extracted. I hoped at the time my recovery would be like the first time; fast and seemingly permanent. But the first time my circumstances were suitable for surgery and radiation, along with chemotherapy. The second time, neither surgery nor radiation would be useful. And chemotherapy—originally planned to last about as long as the first time—in this most recent situation would take more time and would not yield the immediate hoped=for good news. Seven months in, I do not have a long-term prognosis…nor a formal short-term prognosis (though short term, at least, is probably pretty good). So many people have it so much worse than I; I have no business feeling pessimistic or depressed when far too many people cannot get any treatment because financial or other constraints make it impossible. I should attempt to emulate people who confront such situations with energy, enthusiasm, and positivity. Not only would I feel better, I would feel more confident in myself and in the long-term outcome of the effort to vanquish the disease. Perhaps it’s the lengthy wait between full-throated treatments (three weeks) that gets me down. Time is subject to manipulation, if approached from the right perspective; I will approach it from that perspective. I have choices. I will make the right ones.

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My introduction to the unreliability and impermanence of friendship took place from my last two years of high school through the college years. That was the introduction; the lesson was etched eternally into my psyche in the years that followed. Slowly—or maybe abruptly—five guys who constituted my circle of friends disappeared from that sphere. Two of them had been close friends since elementary school. There was no sudden rupture in the friendships. One or more of us—or all of us—simply changed. I remember being surprised and disappointed, as the five of us began to go our own ways, that the bond of friendship was not close to as strong as I had believed it to be. But at the time, I doubt I was consciously aware of the depths of my disappointment with my misunderstanding of the very concept of friendship. That came a little later, when I found myself hesitant to open up to potential new friendships. What I had assumed would be lifelong connections could simply disappear. Investing emotionally in friendships would not lead to strong bonds; it would have been more like throwing money into a slot machine that never paid out. Except money has no emotional value, whereas friendships might. When, several years later, I contacted my old friends, the reception was cool…standoffish….suspicious. The relationships had not survived time and distance. I suppose I might not have been the only one surprised at the lack of interest and familiarity. After all, my old friends were not the only ones who simply allowed our long-term friendships to turn to stale vapor. By the time one reaches middle age and beyond, most friendships that might last have already been established. The likelihood that emotional investments beyond those years will be stable or grow diminishes; so exposing oneself to the increasing likelihood of disappointment becomes a risk that may not be worth taking.

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Dreams punctuate long periods of unconsciousness, but they leave only shreds of meaningless stories in their wake. Everything has meaning, though, right? So the stories are mysterious, not meaningless. If one could unravel their mysteries, a person might understand their meanings. Some dreams seem to consist of two-dimensional stories told through the placement of multiple layers of thin, translucent films placed on top of one another. A layer five levels deep may seem familiar, but is insufficient by itself to clearly express meaning. Frustration builds as layer two disappears and layer three melts into the strata beneath it.

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You

Wisdom shatters in the cold reality of political turmoil. Politics goes beyond simply excusing dishonesty and dishonor. That parasitic profession encourages, embraces, and rewards depravity. Fueled by fear and by the lust for money and power (that is, greed), the mechanics of political control employs a scorched earth policy designed to murder decency by withholding oxygen and hope. Political opponents are more than philosophical foes. With razor-sharp rumors and lies, they slash at their adversaries’ arteries, attempting—at a minimum—to severely injure their  antagonists; hoping to inflict excruciatingly painful and deadly wounds. To the victor belong the spoils. More than just patronage, the spoils today refers to freedom and the pursuit of happiness. Wisdom is an obsolete concept, an obstacle to be overcome with a repetitive chant: The ends justify the means…the ends justify the means…the ends justify the means… Is it innocent naiveté or ignorant gullibility to believe in the value and dignity of wisdom—that archaic concept that once was an honorable objective?

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Facing your own mortality forces you to re-evaluate your priorities.

~ Paul Allen ~

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Trump and his minions got it right when they decided tapping into the pent-up rage and frustration of blue-collar voters would unleash a cult-like worship that could be manipulated to his benefit. The selection of Vance as his running mate provides evidence that the “working class” remains a key—perhaps the key—constituency in Trump’s way of thinking. And he’s no doubt right. The selection of a running mate for Kamala Harris can do for the Democrats what Trump and Vance have done/are doing for Republicans. Someone who would be seen by those same frustrated blue-collar voters as an ally and “one of us,” could make the difference in the November election. Who might that be, though? I wish I knew. Absent the need for mass popularity, my personal potential candidate might be Pete Buttigieg, Mark Kelly, Josh Shapiro, Andy Beshear, or Gretchen Whitmer.  If I had greater faith in the American electorate, I would focus on either a two-female ticket or a female and gay male ticket. We desperately need change, strong leadership, and a powerful message that offers evidence that no one at any level of the socio-economic scale is either taken for granted or whose needs and desires are safe to ignore.

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I should have updated my will and my healthcare power of attorney long before now. With each visit to the oncologist—especially each one in which there’s no news about desirable progress (or its lack)—the importance of doing something about those documents becomes more pressing. Before this week is out, I will make an appointment to see an attorney about these matters. Maybe going on the record with this self-imposed deadline will give me the push I need to do something about it, instead of just talking about it.

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During the course of my life, some people who have long been important to me and to whom I think I once was important seem to have faded away. That reality, of course, is not unique to me. It happens to almost everyone at one time or another as the circumstances of multiple intertwined lives change. Thinking about what might have caused those relationships to have cooled or disappeared, it seems evident that decisions—either conscious and deliberate or circumstantial by default—must have been made that led to the situation. Regardless of how and why the relationships vanished, their absence leaves an emptiness that is not easy, or possible, to fill. Hmm. Just thoughts bouncing around in an otherwise empty head.

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I am thinking about YOU as I prepare to publish this post. All you need as evidence of that fact is to look at the words I just wrote.

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Remembrance and Recall

This is one of those stubborn early mornings—the sort of introduction to daylight hours that promises a full day of argumentative thoughts. Every opinion…every idea, every emotion… will slam into fierce opposition. And those opposing positions will encounter equally steadfast enemies of stability. Except to those few people who might pay especially close attention—and notice the blank look of bewilderment on my face—the internal strife beating me senseless will be almost imperceptible. Promising hope versus resigned despair. Joy versus sorrow. Acceptance versus rejection. Belief versus skepticism. Fat and happy versus starved for affection. I seem to cultivate ennui and enthusiasm. Tattered philosophies in support of both suicide and perpetual life reside in the same place in my brain—at the same time. The opacity of confusion makes crystal clear the impurities obscuring my vision. And I am so bloody tired I could scream. But there is nothing unusual about this morning. It’s just the transformation of abnormal to normal; weird to routine. Perhaps this state of mind is a side-effect of cancer. Or maybe cancer is a side-effect of this state of mind. In my mind’s eye, I see a high-gloss, dark grey dinner plate covered with specks of dust. The duality of a dull shine speaks to me, but in a language I can no longer understand.

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Not even a drop of creativity spills from the tips of my fingers. It’s as if the spigot valve has been closed tightly, then welded permanently shut. Adding insult to injury, the spigot and all its parts and pieces were made of lead cast into a simple mold. Memory will do that, if you let it.

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More Intricacies of Living

Every aspect of living is immeasurably complex. Somewhere online I came across an assertion that there are approximately 18 decillion colors (that figure is represented by an 18 followed by 33 zeros) available for our eyes to distinguish between. Glancing at the menu showing on the left side of my computer, I see dozens of small graphic icons, each representing an item from the menu. And I consider that every letter of every word in that menu and every graphic image comprises dozens, if not hundreds (or more) pixels. When my eyes sweep down to my desktop, they are greeted by an impossibly large number of intricate patterns of the teak wood grain. The clutter on top of the desk hides at least two-thirds of the slab of teak and the extraordinary intricacy of that hidden wood. Patterns caused by slight variations in the teak surface make visible a texture that is, at once, smooth as glass and rough as a mountain range. The distance between the nearly-invisible peaks and valleys of the desktop suggest to me that mountaintops and the plains below them illustrate a similar geography—but the relationships between zenith and nadir are radically different. Pieces of paper, each decorated with letters and numbers produced by ink, litter my desk. Every miniscule droplet of ink that left those images on the paper, is composed of countless molecules. Threads of wood fiber, probably much thinner than  a human hair, are bound together to form those sheets of paper. Speaking of hair, when I glance at the front of my shirt, I see several strands of grey; they may represent the first few hairs to abandon my head in response to my recent chemotherapy session. How many more strands of hair remain attached to my scalp, I wonder? Could the answer to that question have any practical value? How, by the way, is practical value measured? Certainly, there must be a way to equate and/or differentiate two items by measuring their practical value…right?  Infinitesimally small is not always a characteristic of complexity. An unfertilized chicken egg is a single cell, billions of times larger than the tiniest single-cell creature. The smallest single-cell organism is, depending on which source one chooses to believe, the Mycoplasma gallicepticum or the Mycoplasma genitalium or one of various other itsy-bitsy creatures. Complexity runs rampant throughout the smallest “things” to the largest. If I were to take time to view, for just ten seconds each, and catalog a description of every square millimeter of space in my study, I suspect I would be tied up until well after the thousandth anniversary of my presumed death. I say “presumed death” because we cannot know precisely what death is. That reality is a little hard to fathom.

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Aphrodite, considered the most beautiful of the gods, was married to Hephaestus, the god of metalwork and fire. She was unfaithful to her husband, though; his brother was her lover. I have been interested in Greek mythology for a long while, but I’ve always shied away from delving into it because I am afraid I could never fully understand all the familial relationships. Perhaps a graphic Ancestry.com family tree might help me capture and appreciate those relationships.

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I want to sit on the deck, drinking an espresso. And so I shall. I probably won’t go to sleep out there, but it’s a possibility. I still am tired, despite a night of more or less solid sleep. In an ideal world, I could call a bakery and have delivered to my home a couple of klobasneks (with jalapeños). I’ve always called them kolaches, but only recently re-learned that kolaches are sweet pastries; my favorites are savory klobasneks. I would like a big apple fritter delivered to me, as well. I write about apple fritters too often; perhaps I should instead write about and worship peach fritters.  And off I go; no pastries, but tasty dark espresso in an attempt to ward off napping so early on a Sunday.

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Caustic News

Two hours have passed since I woke. I am newly tired and bursting with hunger. Whether sleep or food proves more appealing remains to be seen. My most recent chemo treatment lived/lives up to the unpleasant reputations long-enjoyed by chemotherapy. Oncologists, I have decided, are paid to poison patients—compensated to take their patients to the brink of surrendering to lethal doses of drugs whose side-effects warnings always include, among other frightening impacts, death…or wishing for it. The world outside my window looks clear and pleasant; too bad I do not feel in the least inclined to venture out into it. At this very moment, I would prefer pain-free unconsciousness.

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Connections to the outside world tend to wither with the passage of time and the insulation of distance. Without regular freshening, supple relationships with other people degrade into thin and brittle links, subject to shattering under minimal pressures—as light as the sound and weight of whispers. One’s comfort with casual communications atrophies and is replaced by a preference for listening to one’s own thoughts. And one starts to prefer imagining the thoughts of others; without the increasing awkwardness of hearing them and sensing the expectations for a response. Time and distance cultivate social isolation. Thoughts that would seldom manifest in the mind of a socially-engaged person can take control of the mind of an apprentice recluse. Madness risen from the depths of a dungeon of one’s own creation asserts itself and insists on testing its own potential as a lethal threat to serenity.  Who is to say this is unnatural? Perhaps most of humanity simply has trained itself to hide its most dangerous attributes…with the rest waiting to demonstrate their demonic nature at the most terrifying moments. Hiding inside a steel and stone vault may be the only reliable protection. Fear and rage combined, though, may be worse than ineffective resistance.

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I was just six weeks old when I crawled up onto the kitchen counter and into the sudsy hot water of the sink. No one was home with me at the time; everyone had gone frogging down by the ponds. When Aunt Samantha returned to the house with a gunny-sack full of frogs, she heard me gurgling and cooing in the kitchen. When she saw me, she bellowed, “What the hell are you doing in the kitchen sink, Brakeman Q. Jones, III?!”

In response, I said, “Do you really expect a six-week-old baby to answer your idiotic question, Auntie? What does it look like I’m doing? I’m scrubbing the mud off my behind. Someone really ought to clean my crib every month or two. By the way, isn’t someone supposed to looking after me? To make sure I don’t DROWN?!”

Samantha had never liked me, not even when she was shown sonogram images when I had spent only four months in the womb. Samantha slugged her sister (my mother), Inebria, in the stomach to express her distaste for bringing me into the world. Lorca, my grandmother on my father’s side, witnessed Samantha’s attempt to kill me and she reacted by beating Samantha senseless. Samantha has never liked Granny Lorca, either, since then.

I’m getting sidetracked. I wanted to explain how it was that, at six weeks of age, I was able to make my way to the kitchen sink and engage my aunt in conversation. I wish I knew. Unlike the rest of my semi-siblings (they all had different parents), I was precocious. I had learned to speak three languages (English, Mandarin, and Pashto) by the time I reached my two month anniversary. By four months, I had mastered quantum mechanics and trigonometry. I graduated, with honors, from Harvard University’s School of Yugoslavian Welding and Celestial Art before my first birthday. I fathered the first of sixteen children before I was two, completing the process by age four. I’ll have to tell you sometime about the period I spent with the concubines. If I hadn’t been there myself, I doubt I would have believed the story. But I was there and I have high-resolution video of me performing the surgery to replace my own clavicle to prove it. Yes, I’ve lived in challenging times, moments in history in which I had to eat my own obstacles just to survive. I can tell you are more than a little skeptical of my tale. I won’t waste any more of my time, then, on flooding you with truth. It takes too much energy to warrant throwing it all away on deniers.

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The news is caustic. Don’t get any on your clothes.

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Pondering People and Places

Living at the end of a cul-de-sac in a mixed hardwood and pine forest satisfies my craving for solitude. But when that craving has been fully met for an extended period, I sometimes long for human interaction. That yearning for engagement takes two distinct forms: 1) a desire to anonymously and casually observe strangers go about their lives; and 2) an eagerness to experience the luxury of being in the company of friends or family or acquaintances whose presence can help block the discomfort that comes with exposure to the collective flaws of humanity.

What I’ll call observational experience can take place almost anywhere; a place in the presence of strangers where I can watch people. I remember standing in the middle of various bridges over the Chicago River, watching people scurry about. While I watched, I concocted stories about many of those anonymous strangers. I knew where they lived, their housekeeping habits, the kinds of people in their social networks, and the extent to which living or working in the city either satisfied their dreams or stood as an obstacle to achieving them. Their lives, although completely different from mine, were absolutely familiar to me. Knowing them, the way I did, I was safe with them and from them.

Engaged experience is my term for the kind of intimacy among people who are close; a completely anonymous stranger would not fit in that group of people. That level of closeness almost always involves emotional connections, perhaps tempered with something like intellectual parity. Intellectual parity, alone, cannot create the kind of bond to which I refer. Engaged experiences tend to be the most fulfilling (though both are appealing and satisfying), but they can change from comfortable relationships to difficult and unpleasant relationships in the blink of an eye. That potential for change (and the fact that dissolving connections gone awry with people in that sphere can be so difficult) tends to cause people, especially introverts, to slow the development of such relationships.

But, back to living in the woods. I am used to the privacy and the quiet. I like the aloneness living here provides. Yet it is the periodic visit by forest inhabitants that unexpectedly thrill me. Yesterday afternoon, I glanced out a front window to see a large deer saunter down the street directly in front of my house. It is not at all uncommon to see such sights; nonetheless, I am almost giddy with excitement when they occur. If what I saw, instead, was a human figure walking by, I would be at once curious and a little alarmed. The deer’s motives, from my perspective, are pure and unthreatening. Even though I know about as much about the man as I do about the deer, I distrust him. Whereas the deer has ample innocent reason to stroll by my house, I assume the man’s motives are not in my best interests. Fortunately, it is much more likely for me to see a deer walk by than for me to see a man pass by my house. Which is largely responsible for my happiness with my home’s location. If I had 2000 acres of land, surrounded by an impenetrable electrical fence, I might feel even more secure and comfortable in my solitude.

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I wrote a lengthy paragraph about my longing to create a third place. My connection was lost, though, and there is no record of what I wrote except in my mind. I am too tired/lazy to try to reconstruct it.  That’s upsetting; I was getting all excited about my ideas for a third place.

 

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When

  1. The planned half-hour visit at the oncology center this afternoon is being extended to 2 hours +/-. More fluids and magnesium and something to minimize the joint and muscle pain. Chemo apparently impacts patients in different ways, so every visit seems to involve adjustments to treatment. We had hoped for a quick visit, followed by some lunch…lunch will be later than planned. That is not a problem, though, as I have not been hungry for quite some time. But I need to eat, especially protein. A small NY strip might do the trick. Or something else…something light and not too filling. Deep boredom accompanies me to these sessions. One day, this will be finished. With good fortune, it will be complete, successful, and…history. When, though?
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Shaking Out the Cobwebs

What should occupy one’s mind at any given moment? The answer, regardless of what it is, consists of a judgment. What “should” happen now? What “should” happen next? Depending on my mood, my response might begin by defining “should.”

must; ought (used to indicate duty, propriety, or expediency)
used to express an expectation
used to express a correction

Next would come my soliloquy on all the expectations we heap upon ourselves. There would be no purpose for launching into a speech, yet the urge to orate—when it comes—is unstoppable. And on and on and on. One thing after another and before the next. Over and over and over again until a quarter past the end of Time. That’s as close to purpose as we will ever get. We will forget it, though, before a complete memory forms and suddenly turns to warm mist. Old, inaccessible, recollections strewn with embarrassment take physical form when their use as memories is no longer viable. The burial vaults and wrought-iron fences of Lafayette Cemetery No. 1 in New Orleans began taking physical form in in 1833, paralleling the death of a number of New Orleanians. Clever survivors of family violence and farm accidents and attempted murders on Bourbon Street took to having elaborate stone carving made to mark the graves of their prominent predecessors. More than a little black magic prompted the creation of those headstones and private stone grottos. Rumor had it that an eternal resting place untouched by black magic would become a cauldron of unspeakable agony for the resident, hence the proliferation of stone grave markers. At least that’s the story I’ve been telling to children I’ve wanted to terrify.

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Another trip to the oncologist’s office today, this time to get routine blood work done and talk to the doctor and/or her nurse. I’ll request a new prescription for painkillers, inasmuch as there’s just one tablet left. Ideally, the aches and pains will disappear by later this morning; still, I’ll get the tablets just in case I need them for the next chemo session, two weeks hence. If this series of chemo rounds is like the last one, though, I’ll be back to see the oncologist at least once or twice a week.

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Three significant shots last night of powerful Crown Royal Peach Whiskey, coupled with two gummies, led me to sleep long enough to feel at least moderately rested this morning. I hadn’t had anything alcoholic for a week or thereabouts, so my intoxicating intake was enough to put me right to sleep, though I woke a few times during the night. Still, though, I feel close to becoming a member of the human species again this morning.

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I began this morning by focusing on the top of my head, first, then moving down slowly to the back of my head, my shoulders, and my chest and arms. My focus was to drain the stresses from every part of my body. I got part way there. I think I need instruction. Or a coach. Or an enabler. Or something. I can be distracted by a swirl of abstract black & white shapes I see through my shut eyes. I remain convinced the way to achieve complete relaxation is to be sedated by a skilled anesthetist for four days running. It could be three, could be seven; whatever is the “correct” number of days to remain in a comatose state. The combination of meditation and medication could be troublesome, though, so I’ll do whichever is safest. Except I sometimes need to take some risks. Maybe I do not need to; I just want to. I wonder if I am alone in getting the more-than-occasional urge to take risks? What is it about risks that rattle one’s brain? It is the fact that risk and romance both stimulate the same neural pathways (actually, I just made that up…may be or may not be true).

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Progressive anarchy may be the fairest and most efficient form of governance. Or, maybe, progressive monarchy. Or benevolent matriarchy.

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Stormy

The aches and pains and upset stomach are lingering far too long. But they could last even longer. I read answers to this question posed on an American Cancer Society website, “How long does it take for Taxol side effects to go away?

“Many side effects go away fairly quickly, but some might take months or even years to go away completely. These are called late effects. Sometimes the side effects can last a lifetime, such as when chemo causes long-term damage to the heart, lungs, kidneys, or reproductive organs.”

I hope Taxol has not caused and is not causing long-term damage to my heart, lungs, kidneys, etc. And I hope the side effects I am experiencing will disappear soon. Already, though, they have lasted longer than the three or four days M.D. Anderson Cancer Center says is typical of their duration. My chemo treatment was last Thursday; I am now in the day five aftermath. The pain has diminished considerably, but there is room for more comfort in and around my joints, muscles, and other component parts. If each chemotherapy session mimics this one, I will take a strong disliking to every one of them. I should not complain, though; better now than I felt a couple of days ago.

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Mi novia drove my car to the auto repair shop this morning, where she left it to be coddled and nurtured and otherwise treated with tenderness and compassion (because, in her view, I think, I am too weak and fatigued…unfit to drive or even ride as a passenger). The morning reacted to the trip with growling and grimacing, filling the sky with menacing thunder and threatening lightning. Light grey clouds filter most of the sun’s light, as if hiding celestial dangers behind mysterious clumps of poisonous smoke. Those angry clouds appear dull and rounded, but they are as sharp as scalpels and as lethal as grenades. A particularly loud clap of thunder can spray blood-soaked blades and devastating shrapnel into the far reaches of the edge of the universe, a place where safety failed to find a hiding place. One’s imagination can rip comfort to shreds, leaving it frayed and torn and nearly disemboweled. A demonic morning transforms into an era of bleakness and hopeless regret. Where does all this gloom originate? The solution is laughter, of course; howling, screeching, shrieking laughter.

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Enough of this!

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Moonscape

A quick look at the websites of the New York Times, NPR, Associated Press, etc., etc. has left me thoroughly unimpressed with this morning’s news. And Facebook disappoints me, as usual. So does CNN. And damn near everything else delivered by way of the internet. I cannot imagine that any “entertainment” on television or in newspapers would be interesting, either. Even the trees outside my window and the milky-white sky are dull and unattractive. Weeds in the “rock garden” are troublesome, too. Everything in my field of vision has all the appeal of a grainy, out-of-focus photograph of a hideous, dusty moonscape.

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A pain killer that had been prescribed for me last December, paired with a gummy, got me through the night in reasonable comfort. But they had worn off before 6 this morning. Though I am still waiting for the pain killer I took an hour and a half ago to start working, this morning’s aches pale—so far—in comparison to yesterday’s. My preference, of course, is to feel no pain at all, in part because whining is terribly unbecoming of me, both physically and mentally. Picture, if you will, the whimpering—very nearly weeping—of an old man as he suffers through the unpleasantness of drug-induced arthritis. The pain may not approach a level I could legitimately label agony, but I am behaving as if it does. The morning would be much more appealing to me if my pain would suddenly disappear. Poking fun at myself might help minimize the discomfort brought about by Taxol. If that’s what it takes, I will mock myself mercilessly. Seriously, the pain is nowhere near as unpleasant as it was yesterday, but I’ll complain about it just as fiercely as if it were.

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The cost of a first-class Forever postage stamp has just increased from 68¢ to 73¢. Even with that 5¢ increase, a U.S. first-class stamp is the least expensive among those available from more than 25 other countries. Japan, Brazil, Serbia, and Russia (as of June 2023) were the only countries’ first-class stamps that cost less than U.S. stamps. I am amazed by the fact that an average #10 envelope and a single sheet of paper contents can be physically delivered from Miami, Florida to Seattle, Washington for such a low price. The current pricing structure of the U.S. Postal Service is hemorrhaging red ink, though, which makes the price of a stamp seem ridiculously low and/or the service mind-numbingly inefficient.

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That is all.

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Fragments

A short while ago, mi novia persuaded me to cancel this morning’s scheduled appointment for my car’s maintenance, insisting I should not be driving in my condition. Though my joint pain and body aches are not as bad as they were at their worst, yesterday, they remain severe enough that they could make me a danger behind the wheel. I took two tablets of Motrin at 2:00 a.m., after taking two tablets seven hours earlier. The maximum recommended 24 hour dosage is six tablets; I want something considerably stronger. If I promise to use morphine or fentanyl responsibly, perhaps my doctor would prescribe an unlimited supply of one or the other? Wishful thinking, I am afraid. I will call her in a little while, though, to seek pain relief of some sort. And I will try to reschedule my car’s maintenance soon.

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Incoherent thoughts get in the way of contemplation. Efforts to think clearly are almost pointless in the face of moderate confusion—and impossible when confronted with full-on distraction. Headaches and body aches and worries and weakness scramble the brain’s attempts to given focused consideration to anything. Ideas transform into smoke and emptiness. Curiosity sinks like a stone, disappearing into an opaque, bottomless ocean. Even fire grows cold and rigid, its once red and orange flames turning muddy grey and obsidian black. Meaning degrades into useless vapor, leaving dull patches of triviality in place of everything it should have touched.

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I am unable to assemble even fragmented thoughts. So I will stop trying.

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Damn Pain

The side effects of the latest round of chemo treatments (including taxol) took two days to hit me. And when they hit, they hit quite hard. By mid-afternoon on Saturday, my knees started to ache; a couple of hours later, the pain had amplified several-fold. By 7 p.m., I felt the same level of pain in my elbows, wrists, shoulders, back, etc. During the course of the night, it intensified; every joint, muscle, and tendon felt a level of arthritis-like pain I have never before felt. The pain persists now, around 11:00 a.m., but it is not quite as intense as it was earlier—thanks, probably, to acetaminophen. According to a Mayo Clinic website, chemo-caused “pain in the joints or muscles, especially in the arms or legs…usually does not need medical attention.” Regardless, I will call the oncology clinic tomorrow to inquire. If there’s something I can take to lessen the level of pain, I would like to have it available. Ach! I anticipated possible hair-loss or thinning within the first three weeks of treatment, but I did not expect this. I should have remembered, though, that when my late wife underwent chemo for her breast cancer in 2003, the effects of taxol on her were pretty brutal.

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Between brief periods of sleep last night, I checked my phone for news. The all-consuming national news disturbed me, of course, as I considered what happens to a nation’s psyche after a traumatic event like an attempted assassination. If only human decency would again capture the national spirit, the future might hold some promise.

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Enough for now. I want to rest and minimize the damn pain.

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Frayed Nerves

Starting over. The thought of beginning a new chapter in one’s life prompts feelings of both excitement and fear. The idea simultaneously is inviting and daunting. But starting over is more than beginning a new chapter. Starting over erases old obstacles—and old accomplishments. Starting over rebuilds a life on an old foundation; maybe even building a new foundation on which to construct a new life. Discarding old chapter outlines to serve as guides. Weaving new fabric with fresh thread. All sorts of challenging metaphors apply. A young person with only a few years invested in building his life probably finds starting over challenging but doable. Middle age, arguably the time of life in which starting over is more commonly attempted, requires a person to abandon more of her investment in time and energy in order to try to start over. When one who has spent even more time—nearly a lifetime—writing the chapters of his life (or allowing the chapters to be written), starting over becomes considerably more difficult; circumstances may make it impossible, or almost so. Abundant and momentous challenges to beginning anew may dull whatever appeal starting over has: where to live; how to make new friends; who will join in the renewal; new doctors and other healthcare concerns; and on and on. And perhaps the most significant challenge of all: are the reasons to start over sufficient to merit the stresses and strains and loss of what is to be replaced? The reasons for starting over probably are as numerous as the people who try; certainly as numerous as the people who succeed. The core issue, of course, is whether starting over is primarily intended to change the life that heretofore has been lived or the person who has lived it? I think about this quite a lot. I never reach any steadfast conclusions. Sometimes, though, I think starting over becomes impossible at some point in a person’s life. When that point is reached, though, I think differs from person to person. And learning when that point has been reached requires a person to try, and fail, to start over. I have not stopped pondering these ideas; more to come, I suspect.

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Last night was quite enjoyable. Good food, good conversation, and lots of laughs. Casual. Comfortable. The kind of evening that is both stimulating and relaxing.

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My skepticism about the validity of  information from the internet grows with every passing day. Even sources I once I thought I could rely on for unbiased accuracy increasingly disappoint me with obvious slant and more and more frequent misinformation. Far right and far left so-called facts spread like wildfire, fueled by what seem to me intentional lies distributed by people and organizations who do not trust the truth to support their positions…so they manufacture facts to suit them. Fact-checking is becoming more and more difficult because reliable information sources are becoming harder and hard to find. I often feel it necessary to preface anything I pass along from the internet with something to the effect that “if it is true, and I would not stake my life that it is…” or “I cannot vouch for its accuracy (or its inaccuracy), but …” But I have learned that my cautions are not necessarily heard. All I can do, I think, is to express philosophies about how people should behave and how the world should work and not pass judgments on anyone or anything unless I have ALL the facts, which I typically do not. Yet what I think I can do I often fail to do. So I am as guilty as the next person for failing to direct my own thoughts to what is “right.” And  we’re all destined to suffer the same fate; humanity is doomed. We cannot be surprised, can we? We’ve had plenty of time to evolve into decent creatures but we’ve squandered our time on self-serving wars and other such power-grabs. I could go on about that for a week and a half, but I won’t. Not just now, anyway.

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I will drink another little cup of espresso. It may calm my nerves and settle my brain. It may not. Only time will tell.

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Do Not Drown

I hoped for a shorter-than-advertised session with the oncologist yesterday. Hope is wasted energy. We arrived at 8:45 a.m. We left the oncology center at 5:20 p.m. I know little more now than I did when I arrived. Apparently, though, the carboplatin desensitization process worked; after it was completed, I was given a full dose of carboplatin and, as far as I can tell, I did not die from an allergic reaction.  And I was given a full dose of taxol. And a large infusion of magnesium. And an infusion of Benadryl that made me sleepy (but did no put me to sleep), and several little doses of various other stuff. It was a LONG day. I return Monday for more blood work and then again later this month for another long (but, I hope, not quite so long) treatment. And, I hope, additional information/updates. They will have me get another PET scan about 3 months after the most recent one. Little by little, I will learn what my body is doing to/for me.  In the meantime, no month-long road trips, I suppose.

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An online essay from the July 8 edition of the New York Times, entitled “The American Elevator Explains Why Housing Costs Have Skyrocketed,” offers a fascinating perspective on underlying causes of increasing home prices. Among them, according to the author, are special interests whose financial goals often conflict with one another but whose greed run in parallel. Developers want to maximize their profits by minimizing costs; union contractors want maximize their income by maximizing pay rates. Both focus, then, on what is best for themselves, sometimes (frequently?) at the expense of their end-use customers: the people who will occupy the structures they plan and build. I would not deny reasonable income to either developers or to contractors. The problem, in my mind, is who defines reasonable. I tend to support unions far more than I do developers, but I think unions can go much too far in their battles to maximize their members’ financial positions.  And the politicians and others who bend to the demands of unions are just as guilty. In my opinion, though, developers probably use their political and financial prowess to secure political support at the expense of both contractors and home-buyers. The article, by the way, extrapolates from the elevator experience to the home-building experience.  The elevator experience is what initially attracted my interest. The author, Stephen Smith, first explained the problems with elevators in this country and then illustrated the difference in price for American versus European elevators:

Elevators in North America have become over-engineered, bespoke, handcrafted and expensive pieces of equipment that are unaffordable in all the places where they are most needed. Special interests here have run wild with an outdated, inefficient, overregulated system. Accessibility rules miss the forest for the trees. Our broken immigration system cannot supply the labor that the construction industry desperately needs. Regulators distrust global best practices and our construction rules are so heavily oriented toward single-family housing that we’ve forgotten the basics of how a city should work

A basic four-stop elevator costs about $158,000 in New York City, compared with about $36,000 in Switzerland. A six-stop model will set you back more than three times as much in Pennsylvania as in Belgium.

What does it matter than I have read the article and feel that I better understand some of the cost-drivers of housing and elevator construction? Will I take any actions toward addressing the inadequacies and unfairness of the system? Short of calling for a series of massively advertised, highly focused, non-political national discussions aimed toward ways of achieving maximum fairness, best practices, at the lowest costs in EVERY sector of the economy, what other windmills might I tilt at? Children and idealistic old men and women, alone, view windmills as worthy of our attention. Is there anything else we can do and be equally as ineffective?

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Off to the bank in a while to complete the transfer of officer signatories for the church accounts. And, later, dinner with mi novia‘s daughter and, I hope, with mi novia‘s daughter’s father (who is AKA known as mi novia‘s former husband). I think I’ve said before I am glad to see that people who go through a divorce can remain friends; he is an intelligent guy, very interesting and pleasant to be around. Today will be a pressure-reduction day for me, I hope, easing the stress of yesterday’s unexpectedly long day of dealing with a downside of cancer. My advice: don’t get cancer—but if you do, go with the flow and float. Fight it, but try not to get caught in the rapids and drown in the process.

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Answers Again

Today will be a long one at the oncology center. My patient portal indicates I will be there for five-and-a-half hours; my hope is that it will not take that long. But the Taxol (brand name for Paclitaxel) infusion alone, if I am to believe what I’ve read on the internet, will take around three hours. Add to that the time required for the other IV drugs and fluids, the blood draw, the conversation with the oncologist, and flushing the IV line, and I would not be surprised at five-and-a-half hours. During what I had hoped would be the only course of chemotherapy, which started in January, I often returned at least once or twice a week (if not more frequently) for blood draws and subsequent drug adjustments. It’s not like I have other pressing business, of course, but I prefer absolute freedom. Most of us do, I suspect. I hope to hear an updated prognosis, but I imagine it may be too early for that; only after the drugs have been given time to work and measures of their effectiveness taken can I legitimately expect anything more concrete than “we’ll have to wait and see.” Not that my oncologist would say that to me.  And so, Grasshopper, practice patience until that characteristic becomes your natural reaction to all thing that call for waiting.

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It’s jarring, the sense that the future is on hold until questions about its viability have been answered. But that truth is common—pervasive. We cannot know what will be until we know what is. Even then, we can only guess. And we do not seem to be able to agree of what has been. History, which cannot be changed, often is. Perception interprets reality; history is contextual and individual-specific. Two people who shared the same experience may recall completely different historical records of “what happened.”

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Enough thought for now.

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Reality, Viewed Separately Together

Apathy once was of great concern to almost everyone. But nobody cares anymore. That’s just one more deeply-fatigued manipulation of a time-worn play on words. Uniqueness in creativity becomes harder to achieve with every new-born baby. Babies are not simply cute, innocent little beings—potential competitors, every one of them. Eventually—and it could happen today or ten years from now—all fresh, new creative thoughts will have been expressed. Every single creative idea will have been previously expressed, making it impossible to unearth more—they all will have become tarnished by use. Any new expressions of creativity claimed as one’s own will be taken as incontrovertible evidence of plagiarism. The penalties for plagiarism will rise sharply when creativity disappears. Short prison sentences will be replaced by something more meaningful—death by firing squad or guillotine…or public hangings. By that time, of course, the penalties for breaking traffic laws—speeding, rolling stop at a stop sign, unsafe lane changes, etc.—will involve public flogging. At some point beyond that moment, all crimes, no matter how petty, will be addressed with the same punishment: submersal, with no breathing apparatus, in a shark cage. Jaywalking or parking in a no-parking zone or any other minor infraction will be penalized by drowning. The immediacy of sentencing and the repeal of all appeal processes will result in an early surge of executions, followed by a period of terror-induced peace.

Cavender Baker had been proud to be a police officer. He served on the force with honor for twenty-eight years, beginning when he was only twenty years old. But changes in the statutes that resulted in treating once-lawful behaviors as capital crimes turned him against the law. His retirement at forty-eight came as no surprise, inasmuch as  he said too openly and too often, “Anyone serving as a police officer today should either quit or be treated as a threat to freedom and democracy and be disposed of accordingly.

Four days after his retirement, Baker was bicycling toward his home after visiting Chamber’s Liquors when stopped by a police cruiser. The driver and his partner claimed Baker had unsafely crossed into the lane for motor vehicle traffic. Baker’s very vocal disagreement led to his forced placement inside a shark cage, now carried in all cruisers.

The police department docks were jammed with police cars and SUVs. Empty shark cages, wet from their recent submersion in the cold waters of Friendly Bay, were stacked on one side of the submersion point. Cages filled with screaming occupants littered the other side. Big metal dumpsters next to the wet shark cages were almost overflowing with big black plastic sacks. A crane swiveled over the full cages and carefully snagged one of them with a hook, when swung it over the water and lowered it into the bay. Five minutes later, the cage was hoisted out of the water, emptied of its criminals, and deposited on the stack of empty shark cages.

Cavender Baker knew a thing or two about escaping from a shark cage and disposing of morally corrupt police officers. Despite the fact that creativity was nearing extinction, it had not completely played out.

Already I’ve lost interest in what happens to Baker. Ach.

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Discard all you are not and go ever deeper. Just as a man digging a well discards what is not water, until he reaches the water-bearing strata, so must you discard what is not your own, till nothing is left which you can disown. You will find that what is left is nothing which the mind can hook on to. You are not even a human being. You just are—a point of awareness, co-extensive with time and space and beyond both, the ultimate cause, itself uncaused. If you ask me ‘Who are you?,’ my answer would be: ‘Nothing in particular. Yet, I am.’

~ Nisargadatta Maharaj ~

I am surprised at myself for, first, reading all the way through the above quote and, second, thinking I understand the author’s points and—moreover—agreeing with them. Nisargadatta Maharaj was, according to Wikipedia, an Indian guru of nondualism. Nondualism, I recently learned, is a viewpoint that questions the boundaries conventionally imposed between self and other, mind and body, observer and observed, and other dualities that help shape our perceptions of reality. In other words, nondualism seems to be one form of ‘woo-woo;’ but an unusual form I can understand and, possibly, embrace. According to someone, writing under the name Gobinda Sardar, Nisargadatta Maharaj ‘taught that there is no individual self , no world , no God , no creation , no liberation , nothing but the absolute reality which he called ‘I am,” I sometimes question the existence of the world, creation, liberation, etc. I regularly assert my disbelief in God. I wonder, though, about the self and liberation and other matters that may tend to mislead our perceptions of what and where and when we are. Most of the time, though, I keep such issues buried under mounds and mounds of irrelevant thoughts.

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Tomorrow, finally, I go back to the oncologist. I’ve been waiting more than a week to learn next steps. I learned yesterday, by viewing a document I earlier had missed in my patient portal, that my new/replacement chemo drugs will be carboplatin (after being desensitized to it) and taxol. I think I’ll still be on Keytruda, but I’m not sure. Taxol, I’ve read, causes most patients to lose their hair; it either goes away entirely or it thins a lot. I’ll ask the doc about whether I should expect to lose my hair. That does not bother me in the least. What bothers me this morning is the knowledge that this new chemo process is an experiment. There is no assurance it will work. That was true, of course, of the first set of chemotherapies, as well. We shall see.

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Shallow Pools

I do not hear the buzzing or ringing or pounding in my ears. Instead, I feel them inside me; in my head, in my chest, in my legs, everywhere. They can be loud, but not loud in the traditional aural sense. On the other hand, they can be nearly silent and almost sensually invisible; I sense them, but most people do not…as far as I know. I can only imagine what silence—absolute silence—is like. To experience the complete absence of sound and all its related vibrations must be glorious. I think about that frequently. But I cannot really imagine it, because I do not know what it is like. Noise, real and imagined, is my constant companion. Fortunately, many years of living with it has enabled me to often block much of its intrusive, annoying, irritating character. But that is equivalent to hiding noise beneath layers of different noises. Replacing the sound of piercing screams with the noise of sirens…fire trucks and ambulances and police cars. I make it sound worse than it is. Once you come to grips with it, your periods of aural rage or terror diminish in volume and frequency.

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The first taste of espresso this morning was…how do I best express this?…horrible. Another gulp confirmed the unpleasant surprise. Excessively bitter, somewhat metallic, utterly unlike the pleasing flavor I associate with coffee.  As I sit here, resigned to discarding the remainder of the wretched stuff in my cup, I wonder whether the coffee beans used in the powdery grinds went bad or whether the espresso machine has gone too long without cleaning? Or could it be something else? Perhaps a beetle or spider or other plump bug found its way into the little espresso pod, before it was sealed, where it decomposed and imparted the horrid flavor to what otherwise would be a wonderfully rich and flavorful delight. The nasty taste could be the work of the person(s) responsible for the Tylenol murders in the early 1980s—or copycats who may have gotten a macabre sense of satisfaction from imitating such unspeakable crimes. The origin of my awful experience with my morning espresso could be something entirely innocent; it might even be traceable to a combination of the taste of the toothpaste I used when brushing my teeth last night with the normal flavor of the ground intense dark roast beans used in the espresso. Whatever the source of the unpleasantness, I fervently hope it was a one-time experience. I hope, even more fervently, it was not the result of an obviously psychopathic would-be killer.

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The big television in our so-called TV Room,  not long after the pause button is pressed, displays a slow rotation of beautiful scenery from around the globe. Most of the photos are nature shots, with a few that mix nature and civilization in appealing ways (such as Sugar Loaf Mountain in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil).  Those images, collectively, both sooth and create a sense of intense longing—longing to be in those places that appear to guarantee serenity. I imagine a week or a month relaxing on a huge, private country estate in Italy or enjoying the crystal clear waters and warm breezes on a private beach in the Caribbean or sitting by a roaring fire in a remote and very private lodge in the Swiss Alps. And, of course, many more places. All very private, very remote and free of obligations. No expectations imposed on me, other than abandoning all pressures and  shedding my every worry. I do not want to be expected to ski just because I am at a ski lodge, nor urged to hike just because I am in an area known for its pristine hiking trails, nor asked to swim or snorkel or dive just because I am in a place considered ideal for such activities. I simply want to be in such beautiful places; soak in the experience of sights and sounds and sensations of simply existing in those spots. Seclusion, privacy, and the freedom to simply soak-in one’s environment are available almost anywhere. I suppose I could find those luxuries almost anywhere. And I should. But adding the spectacular wonders I see in those television screens might amplify the experiences a thousand-fold.

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Trying to think deeply in shallow pools of thought is a frustrating experience.

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All the Corners

The morning hours are mine, alone, today. Yet the sense I am in control—that I have power over my direction—still eludes me. Intrusive thoughts, tearing through my brain like a runaway locomotive, twist hard steel rails into thin, flaccid fibers. Certainty dissolves into ambiguity. Serenity remains a chaotic broken promise. Perhaps more time—much more solitary time—is the cure. But that time must function like a wax candle. And those invasive thoughts must behave like drops of water—trying, but failing, to soak that wax through and through.

Sitting here, many hours after I woke, I realize this morning’s time was never mine. It belongs to listlessness and its co-conspirators. Even this blog was part of the conspiracy, refusing to let me write and add more to it—or even read what I wrote in the past. Finally, after hours of frustrated waiting, I was allowed access to my editor’s platform. By then, though, my unsuitability for the task was obvious; I was a riverboat captain’s apprentice, attempting to land a supersonic jet aircraft on a baseball diamond in Golden Gate Park. My exercise of a sense of productive control will have to wait for another time. And that is fine; gathering clouds and depressing rain are not conducive to bursts of creative energy.

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I summoned enough motivation during the last few minutes to call the auto shop to arrange work on a list of routine maintenance items; next week. And I called to get an appointment to get a haircut; tomorrow. The rest of the day belongs to lethargy; enslavement by fatigue. No searing agony; no excruciating discomfort. Just a dull emotional ache, punctuated by an occasional, but microscopically brief stabbing pain. The same tedious pin-prick-like sensations whose presence have made themselves known for quite some time. Annoying, but not intolerably so. The little symbol is simply an expression of my understanding of the universe, such as it is. However, I am not especially enamored with most symbols because their original, limited symbolism tends to expand exponentially over time with the insertion of ideas and beliefs by people who had no involvement with its creation. People like me. But my insertion tends to operate in reverse. I like minimal meaning; meaning that can be adopted and adapted by people who share some very broad ideas that parallel the original. But, in the overall scheme of things, who cares? That is an unanswerable question, of course, but it summons answers from every corner of existence.

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Jejune

If Brit-Box is a model of experience in England, a number of villages and significant areas of the English countryside are awash in murder. And, if Netflix reflects the legislative landscape throughout Scandinavia, that part of the world seethes with shocking political intrigue. Closer to home, if the old standby television companies (ABC, CBS, and NBC) accurately portray life in this country’s largest metropolitan regions, our big cities are bubbling cauldrons of violence and rage. But, of course, those representations are overblown dramas meant to invite viewership. The intrigue in those programs presents an enormously amplified depiction of fear-inducing circumstance; nothing realistic about them, right? Certainly. But, still, after watching several episodes of Blue Lights, my interest in wandering alone at night along the docks of Belfast has declined considerably. Why is it, I wonder, that we sometimes allow fiction to take control of our thought processes and emotions, manipulating our perceptions of places about which we know very little? It’s embarrassingly gullible to accept that a set of imaginary circumstances involving imaginary people doing ugly, violent, dastardly things represent reality. Hmm. The appeal of such programs rests, in part, on the knowledge that they are, in fact, fiction. If viewers who watch those shows were to believe they were watching as-it-happens documentaries, perceptions might be radically different (I would hope).

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Corn on the cob and quartered fresh tomatoes. Except for the subsequent requirement for hours-long flossing to remove corn debris from between the teeth, the meal approaches perfection. A touch of salt, some pepper, and a bit of butter to compliment the corn can turn an appealing dinner into a joyous feast. Almost any array of veggies and their kin—okra, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, scallions, carrots, cauliflower, tomatoes, corn, green beans, bell peppers, radishes, squash, etc.—can make an immensely satisfying meal. No crucial need for meat. I envy people who live close to farms where such veggies grow and have ready access year-round to a fabulous mix of food fresh-from-the-field.

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Church this morning, followed by lunch with a small group of members/friends. I am almost certain I will need a nap immediately after lunch. I won’t complain about that reality; at least not at the moment. I’ve come to appreciate that I feel considerably better…more rested and relaxed…after a nap. My age and infirmity is catching up with me.

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Mostly Talk

Some people are natural conversationalists. Some of us are not. Those of us who are not sometimes are labeled timid, quiet, reserved, dim-witted, private…the list goes on. Sometimes, the labels are radically different: pounce-ready, silently seething, brilliantly-murderous, pre-explosive, drenched in self-confidence…that list, too, extends for an eternity. Only people who spend a very long time in the presence of those of us who are simply observers or listeners can correctly (often) assign legitimate labels to us. Those labels might be legitimate for one minute or one hour or one day or one week, but they do not apply 24-7. Just like many others, observers tend to rotate between personalities. That means none of us can properly apply labels—that are reliably correct—to others. Our knowledge of people inside and outside of our spheres is, therefore, often artificial and almost always (at least partially) wrong.  We stumble blindly through individual and social experiences. No worries, though; we’re all equally as deaf, as well, and can smell a rat when we feel it biting our fingers. And even natural conversationalists often speak, unintentionally, in tongues that cannot differentiate between flavors.

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Meteorologists suggest that has-been Hurricane Beryl, now a tropical storm, may renew its “hurricane” label over the coming days as it nears the Texas coast. Forecast maps show the remnants of the storm sweeping through Arkansas on Thursday, with 25 MPH winds and some rain. Gentle rain is among the many weather events with which I have a close and personal relationship. Moderate winds, too, are my friends. That having been said, I also am enamored with shrieking, howling winds and horizontal, needle-like raindrops that appear capable of piercing steel; I prefer watching such storms from the safety of comfortable, impenetrable shelters. We shall see what actually transpires.

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Heart-burn has interrupted my evenings for two nights running. Somehow or another, I got in my head the idea that I was to stop using a prescription medication meant to prevent heartburn. Instead, I relied on Tums after-the-fact. I cannot trace the source of my apparent misunderstanding, so I will renew my nightly ritual of taking the prescribed medication. I wonder, though, if I would not have had the heartburn if the stresses an worries of the last few days had been absent. No matter how I try, I cannot seem to fully anaesthetize myself against them. I fully understand the pointless of worry; intellectual understanding and emotional sensation are entirely different experiences (as I’m sure I’ve said dozens of times). I’ll have some answers later in the week; that realization may quiet those stresses. If not the realization, maybe ****** will accomplish the task.

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A different environment. Like one on another planet, far far away.

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Ruminarian

History gives us a preview—a warning—of the future that awaits us if we ignore the lessons of experience. When we are the targets of that cautionary advice, we ignore it at our peril. Our disregard invites the repetition of past mistakes, modified and molded to suit a new time and new circumstances. More often than not, we acknowledge too late the messages that history provides. Is our proclivity toward repeating experiential mistakes a product of our stupidity, our arrogance, or both? Or is it simply a matter of failing to understand the differences between then and now are merely cosmetic?

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Friends invited us over for a wonderful meal yesterday. We enjoyed the feast they prepared and had a great time sitting and talking with them. As is often the case of late, though, I ran out of steam rather early. I understand that the processes of tests and treatments take their toll on my energy, but these latest rounds of frequent and sudden fatigue are becoming extremely annoying. I would have liked to have stayed and talked for hours, but my declining stamina insisted I should go home and recline on the loveseat. Once there, I found it impossible to stay awake and alert for long; I think I was in bed by nine. I woke many times during the night and finally decided, around 3, to get up and go about my day. Two hours have passed since I shuffled out to the kitchen. I may not write much more on this post, at least for now, because another wave of fatigue is washing over me. I sleep too much, but then when I try to stay awake, I learn I just have to acquiesce to whatever it is that requires me to nap, rest, sleep, whatever.

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This blog, long an outlet for my creativity, has become a whine-site—an outlet for my complaints about anything and everything.  I tire of it. I want to return to writing snippets of fiction—scenes that I might later weave into the fabric of stories (except for losing interest in them after a short time…is it ADHD?). If I cannot force myself to focus more time on writing, I will just have to dedicate my energies to ruling the world. “My energies?” I might need to limit the territory over which I seek control to the end of the driveway and work on the rest of the world later.

 

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Looking Inside My Lungs

According to a couple of demographers (Toshiko Kaneda and Carl Haub), who updated an earlier estimate in 2022, 109 billion of people have lived and died since 190,000 BCE. Counting the additional people alive as of their updated 2022 estimate, the number of people who have ever lived is roughly 117 billion. With relatively few exceptions, each of those who lived and died have been mourned, as if they were among a tiny cluster of people who mattered. For those who mourned them, they were people who mattered. For most of the rest of humanity, they were unknown and unworthy of tears—their lives and deaths were largely irrelevant in the macro sense.  Even in the micro sense, the relevance of most of them diminished with time. We still acknowledge plenty of them, of course: Plato, Albert Einstein, Napoleon Bonaparte, Abraham Lincoln, Leonardo da Vinci, Jalāl al-Dīn Muḥammad Rūmī, Julius Caesar, Kahlil Gibran, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Atilla, Emperor Shōwa…there are hundreds more. But those hundreds, or thousands—even if they number in the millions—represent only a miniscule fraction of all who have lived. The relevance of those we recognize from the past were relevant only to a limited extent; their relevance did not embed itself in the psyches of every person living at the same time they lived…and far fewer as time wore on. An argument could be made, I suppose, that one’s great, great, great, great, great, great, great grandmother remains relevant today because, absent her existence, her great, great, great, great, great, great, great grandchild would not have been born. But memories and relevance do not necessarily occupy the same places in the brain. Are any of us relevant today? Will any of us be relevant in one thousand years? Who knows? I do not. I do not know whether my assertions in this paragraph are true. My fingers deliver unverified thoughts to the screen. The reader believes them with peril.

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The results of my bronchoscopy on Tuesday were not the stuff of celebration. We spent a long day at the hospital—arriving at 8 and returning home around 4. My procedure was scheduled to “fit me in” whenever the pulmonologist could. I was wheeled into the procedure room right at noon. They claim I was awake (under “moderate sedation”), but I remember nothing between being asked to bite down on a mouth guard that provides a stable entry for the scope and opening my eyes after the procedure. We then waited for the doctor to come in to discuss the findings. He showed us photos taken from the scope inside my right lung. He said the images showed that it was not Keytruda (immuno treatment drug) that was responsible for the concerning images on the PET scan. [Apparently, the purpose of the bronchoscopy was to determine whether Keytruda was to blame.] Instead, he said, “it’s the disease.” He said he could not perform a biopsy because the tangle of blood vessels all around the prospective biopsy area would have immediately filled the lung with blood and I would have to intubated. The doctor’s bedside manner was a smidgeon better than the last time I saw him, but his demeanor made me think he could have been a robot created without the usual robotic levels of compassion and empathy. Of course, my reaction to him might based on the news he delivered, rather than the way he delivered it. What matters is his technical, medical competence; everyone I spoke to about him, even people who once worked for him and said he was arrogant, offered compliments about his expertise. I expect to discuss with my oncologist next week more detail about the results of the bronchoscopy and the  next steps in dealing with the resurgence of the cancer. Tuesday night, I had some of the common side-effects of the procedure: coughing, slight fever, vomiting, and extreme fatigue. With breaks for throwing up early Tuesday evening, etc., I spent 20+ hours between the time I got home on Tuesday and yesterday afternoon sleeping. Still, I know I am much more fortunate than many, many people who deal with such matters. I am deeply unhappy that I am adding more stress to an incredibly stressful time for mi novia. Ach.

 

 

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Complaints About Gratitude

My good fortune is almost boundless, especially compared to the circumstances confronting million and millions of my fellow Earthlings. But, still, I complain about the difficulties I face. With all those difficulties, I should not have to acknowledge the bounties of my good luck; but there it is.

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Naps, I’ve decided, are shields. They provide temporary protection—in the form of unconsciousness—from the psychological damage to which a person is naturally exposed by living in today’s brutally uncaring world. Children are taught, early, to rely on naps to replenish energy and to secure protection from the harsh world of adults and adulthood. Some of us forget those childhood lessons, though, retrieving them from ancient memory banks long after extensive swaths of time have robbed us of the safety and shelter of naps. Naps reduce the pressure in our heads; they are the relief valves that prevent unnecessary explosions.

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Medical bureaucracy—infamous for its speed that rivals frigid syrup—likes to surprise skeptics. In an unexpected burst of speed, I received phone calls yesterday, while sitting in the treatment chair at the oncology clinic…to schedule my bronchoscopy for this morning. The precise timing of the procedure is more than a little indeterminate, but will be performed this morning…well, today, anyway.  Mi novia, whose calendar for today conflicts with my bronchoscopy, insists on providing my transportation (I cannot drive myself because the procedure involves general anesthesia). So, despite generous friends who were more than willing to come to may aid, she cancelled her plans to care for me. I am not quite sure what my oncologist hopes to learn from the bronchoscopy. I know, I should not have left her office without fully understanding the purpose of the procedure. But my brain becomes scrambled by the reasons for all the scans and infusions and procedures and medications; I acquiesce to the notion that “they are better equipped than I” to determine the best courses of treatment, etc.

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