Saturday, January 31, 2009

waitingrooms

ii.
I sit in the waiting room between places. Eventually a plane will come. It will take me to a city to wait for another plane. Eventually this will take me home.
I travel back to the place that for near a decade has been my life. My things (endless things!) felt cumbersome even before my journey. I felt owned not only by my possessions but by conceptions and commitments. Travel has long been my norm. When did I stop being changed by it and start bringing my expertise to the place I go?
I think of the Buddhist stories of masters and their begging bowls. They would preach for their supper if speaking their wisdom was asked of them. By traveling in poverty these teachers were like me at the market with bad language skills. They could not isolate themselves in their comfort. Not of language, or of softness and warmth. I must learn this balance. I must learn the way to be humbled by the things I see and still be able to reach the world with the things that I need to do.
The Waiting Room is a timelessness that is like impatience stretched. It is not at all like the timelessness of the places we visited. I do not feel relieved of my need to adhere to time. It is not like I felt in the jungles and on the endless afternoons with my pretty friend sleeping against my leg. Here in the waiting room it is the reverse; it is the feeling that time is passing and that nothing I can do will affect the events that will happen. Time has become the measure of impotence instead of freedom. Does this make sense? The jungle makes you free from time in the way that the waiting room makes you captive of it.

Soon the endlessness will end. Soon I will be back in my seat of strength. My narcotic comforts of the soul will surround me. My amazing travel companion will be nearby. She, although changed differently, is as altered by our travels as I am. The Jungle and the Lady will both stay with me and in my head if I have any luck (or grace) at all.
It feels in some way that the Lady and I are bound in a more primal way that romance. In truth if I knew this feeling had existed in previous decades I would have eschewed romance for a travel companion of this merit. If neither the Lady nor I fall from the path the next few decades will be a lot of climbing of rocks and deciphering of languages together.

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