{"id":131,"date":"2003-10-10T10:19:29","date_gmt":"2003-10-10T14:19:29","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.sheilaomalley.com\/?p=131"},"modified":"2012-03-18T11:30:05","modified_gmt":"2012-03-18T15:30:05","slug":"diary-friday-9","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.sheilaomalley.com\/?p=131","title":{"rendered":"Diary Friday"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>This Diary Friday entry is a bit heavy, perhaps.  But hey &#8211; Sometimes life be heavy.  Sometimes life be light.  It is from the summer of 1998.  It has to do with some revelations (incoherent, at times) that I had, regarding God, love, and loss.  So read on, if you dare.<\/p>\n<p>One small Sheila tip:  if you ever meet me, and you hear me begin to discuss quantum physics as a metaphor for life and the human condition &#8211; know that it is time to shut me up, take me out for margaritas, and go do karaoke or something equally as light-hearted and fun!<\/p>\n<p><!--more--><\/p>\n<h3>August 5, 1998<\/h3>\n<p>Walking with Maria and Cashel &#8211; we came across a pile of old <i>Interview<\/i> magazines on a table on 6th and 23rd.  I felt like I had discovered buried treasure.  I was like a kid at Christmas.  So thrilled.  I mean, I love <i>Interview<\/i> magazine unabashedly.  I felt the clouds clear and I bought them all &#8211; as a gift to myself.  Such a small thing!  I am almost embarrassed by my elation.<\/p>\n<p>But that feeling comes so rare these days, so I don&#8217;t feel like I have the right to judge it or belittle it.<\/p>\n<p>Okay &#8230; so you love <i>Interview<\/i> magazine.  All right then.<\/p>\n<p>Do not judge that which excites you.<\/p>\n<p>And then later, on the heels of these ruminations about what excites me, I had a &#8220;revelation&#8221; (not the right word) &#8211; the &#8220;revelation&#8221; stopped me in my tracks on 7th Avenue.  Something came into my head and it was like I hit a forcefield.  Boom.  Stop.<\/p>\n<p>Well, whatever it was &#8211; suddenly this image, or a whole world, came into my head.  Like a little movie.<\/p>\n<p>Summer  &#8211; I was still in Chicago.  I had gone home to RI.  It was at the <u>height<\/u> of the P. thing.  I was on <u>another<\/u> fucking PLANET.  I could feel it &#8211; something <u>huge<\/u> was coming.  But that is just me editorializing it, in retrospect.<\/p>\n<p>What came into my mind on 7th Avenue was just the visuals &#8211;<\/p>\n<p>Me walking into the living room, in my big faded purple T shirt, cut-offs, running sneakers &#8211; I had been out for a run &#8211; I walked in, and Mum and Dad were out on the porch and there were other people there.  Not inner sanctum people, I know that, and it <u>tells<\/u> me what a state I was in, to behave in such a manner in front of random people.  Maybe it was a friend of Siobhan&#8217;s, or of Mum and Dad&#8217;s.<\/p>\n<p>So I walked in, and Dad called out to me, by way of greting, &#8220;P. called&#8221; &#8211; And it was like a nuclear reaction.  Those words hit my atmosphere and I COMBUSTED.  It was totally spontaneous what happened: I started screaming and staggering forward, as though an arrow had struck me.  And I histrionically and dramatically (and truthfully, too!) threw myself down (in degrees) over the armchair &#8211; it was like a melodramatic stage death, or like a little kid pretending to get shot.  And down I went, shrieking and laughing, over the armchair, and then further down, falling over the ottoman, with everyone watching, and laughing, and then I tumbled down off the ottoman and onto the floor &#8211; splat &#8211; and I lay there like a jibbering lunatic.<\/p>\n<p>I don&#8217;t want to editorialize it or try to explain it.<\/p>\n<p>It is what it is.  It was what it was.<\/p>\n<p>P. called my house and talked to Dad, and I promptly became a shrieking banshee in front of people I didn&#8217;t know.<\/p>\n<p>That is what happened.<\/p>\n<p>Life tasted <u>more<\/u> than good.  Everything was <u>so<\/u> exciting.  Something <u>huge<\/u> was coming.  I could <u>feel<\/u> it.  And I was ready for it.  For whatever it was.<\/p>\n<p>And being THAT excited, and THAT free &#8230;<\/p>\n<p>See, I don&#8217;t want to analyze this, because then it sounds like a pity party, or a naive nostalgia joy-ride.<\/p>\n<p>But, in that moment, when I fell over the ottoman, there was no fear, no tentativeness, no caution.  I look back on my fearlessness in AWE.<\/p>\n<p>And then I leapt to my feet and ATTACKED Dad for details.   I grilled him as fearlessly as if he were Ann or Mitchell.  &#8220;Okay.  TELL ME EVERYTHING.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>I was a fucking <u>goof<\/u>ball.<\/p>\n<p>It was high school all over again, only 5,000 times better &#8211; cause it was a real love affair.<\/p>\n<p>And Dad was pretty good about it, I have to say &#8211; because I was totally OUT of control &#8211; Dad became, in the words of Ann and I, &#8220;a good reporter&#8221;.  He didn&#8217;t just tell me the facts, he <u>interpreted<\/u> them.  He said, &#8220;It sounded like he was getting such a kick out of himself &#8211; calling you -&#8221; See, that is the kind of stuff I need to hear!<\/p>\n<p>I fired questions at Dad.  &#8220;And then what did he say?&#8221;  &#8220;And then what?&#8221;  &#8220;Okay, tell me that part again.&#8221;  &#8220;What did his voice sound like?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>I had forgotten all of this &#8211; I had forgotten that moment of histrionic fearlessness, excitement, joy &#8211; It was just the <u>specific moment<\/u> I had forgotten.  Not the whole era, of course, not that whole crazy summer.  That summer becomes a wash the further away from it I get. It is now a phrase, an icon &#8211; the words standing in for the whole.  Like saying &#8220;the 60s&#8221; or &#8220;the Middle Ages&#8221; &#8211; and you get all these pictures in your head, just from the words.  &#8220;That summer&#8221; is that way for me.<\/p>\n<p>So much has happened since then.  So much.<\/p>\n<p>I really don&#8217;t think about that summer anymore.  When I fantasize stuff, or daydream, I <u>never <\/u>go back in time.  I <u>never <\/u>lie around and daydream about that summer, as amazing as it was.  I suppose it hurts too much &#8211; to recall all that ecstasy &#8211; and to know what a fucking disaster was approaching.<\/p>\n<p>Everything is colored by what came after.<\/p>\n<p>But anyway, there it was, on 7th Avenue: a visitation.  A wrinkle in time.  The past as vivid as the present moment.<\/p>\n<p>And &#8211; the &#8220;revelation&#8221; was about the <u>excitement<\/u> &#8211; that word kept coming up in my mind &#8211; the <u>excitement <\/u>&#8211; how <u>excited <\/u>I was &#8211; and then, simultaneously, I thought of the <i>Interview<\/i> magazines, and Boom &#8211; it was as though I had literally walked into an invisible wall.  I stood still.<\/p>\n<p>I remembered the excitement of that year &#8211; the living breathing <u>excitement <\/u>&#8211; and compared it to the excitement of <u>now <\/u>&#8211; finding old magazines on a table in Manhattan &#8230;<\/p>\n<p>All of this happened in a split-second.<\/p>\n<p>Then came the wave &#8211; that wave that sometimes comes.  I don&#8217;t ride the wave.  I just let it wash over me.<\/p>\n<p>Actually, no: this was more like a ripple.<\/p>\n<p>God, I just can&#8217;t describe it:<\/p>\n<p>It was a very <u>brief<\/u> moment of paralysis, and something rippled through me &#8211; I waited it out &#8211; and then I kept going.<\/p>\n<p>I felt a bit shaky &#8211; a bit on the edge &#8211; aware of the bruise in my heart &#8211; all that is left of the original wound.  Like a bad spot in an apple &#8211; that goes all the way through.<\/p>\n<p>I don&#8217;t know &#8211; it was sort of startling.<\/p>\n<p>Later, at home, I was thinking about it.  Thinking, as opposed to experiencing.<\/p>\n<p>The vision of that summer had nothing to do with emotions, or remembering it &#8211; I was IN it.  It LIVED.  But later, reflecting &#8211;<\/p>\n<p>I felt this sort of dying wistfulness.  A dying sadness.  Like that line from Tennyson:<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Our echoes roll from soul to soul,<br \/>\nAnd grow for ever and for ever.<br \/>\nBlow, bugle, blow, <u>set the wild echoes flying,<br \/>\nAnd answer, echoes, answer, dying, dying, dying<\/u>.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>A &#8220;dying echo&#8221; &#8211; a wild echo flying, and then dying &#8230;<\/p>\n<p>Putting it into words doesn&#8217;t seem right.<\/p>\n<p>Will I ever feel that again?  Will anyone ever engender such hysteria and elation in me again?<\/p>\n<p>No, it wasn&#8217;t in a question form, these thoughts.  It was more like statements coming at me:<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;I will never&#8230;&#8221;<br \/>\n&#8220;That moment was it for me&#8230;&#8221;<br \/>\n&#8220;Now it is <i>Interview <\/i>magazines &#8230;&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>I didn&#8217;t stay long in this, I put it behind me, and stepped over the abyss again.<\/p>\n<p>A day or so later &#8211; I had another moment &#8211; on 7th Street in <u>Hoboken <\/u>&#8211;<\/p>\n<p>I&#8217;ve been thinking a lot about God lately.  Or &#8230; no, it&#8217;s more of a &#8230; which came first the chicken or the egg kind of thing.<\/p>\n<p>I have been drawn to churches since the start of the summer.  I see them everywhere, and I go into them.  Any denomination.  I stand there.  Or, like St. Mary&#8217;s in Times Square, I go in, and sit, or kneel.  I light a candle.  I &#8230; pray?  I wouldn&#8217;t give that word to it.  It feels more like a shedding, a dropping away of ballast, a time of <u>be<\/u>-ing.  I&#8217;m sure religious types would say, &#8220;<u>That&#8217;s<\/u> praying.&#8221;  But if I don&#8217;t relate to a word, then I don&#8217;t relate to it.  I believe in relativity.  Not <u>chaos<\/u> &#8211; but <u>relativity<\/u>.  I won&#8217;t have someone tell me what words to use.  I won&#8217;t have someone define the terms for me.  Or try to control my language.<\/p>\n<p>So, from this magnetic church thing, I surmise that &#8211; I am searching.  I am trying to be open to &#8230; spiritual guidance.  In whatever form it takes.  Just the dark flickering atmosphere of St. Mary&#8217;s is enough for me.  I remember what Sue R. said to me &#8211; saying that she thought in a past life I had been a religious fanatic, or a saint.  She said, bluntly, &#8220;Ya drove God crazy.&#8221; So now, I want to know God in my own way.  Not in a way organized by somebody else.  I don&#8217;t even think of God as a &#8230; Supreme Being &#8230; or anything like that.  A &#8220;being&#8221;, to me, is like a human &#8220;being&#8221; &#8211; something singular, something identifiable.  I see God as being <u>all things<\/u>.  Down to the teeniest quantum particle.  It&#8217;s an energy source.  It&#8217;s matter.  It&#8217;s love.  It&#8217;s science.  It&#8217;s the stars, the waves.  The mystery of the fact that we are actually <u>here<\/u>.  That consciousness has evolved, that we are a race that can question our own existence &#8211; to me, that is a miracle.  God is impartial, in a way.  Tidal waves, death, the cosmos, childbirth &#8211; God creates it all.<\/p>\n<p>I get into trouble when I try to put any of this into words.  I don&#8217;t believe that religions should have anything to do with WORDS anyway.<\/p>\n<p>Jesus said it all best, I think.  He&#8217;s the one who spoke all of this most effectively.  Everything else seems diluted to me, or overly intellectual &#8211; or lacking in curiosity.<\/p>\n<p>I&#8217;ve always had my most intense spiritual experiences with nature &#8211; that night on the beach during the hurricane with Betsy and Kate &#8211; stuff like that.<\/p>\n<p>Anyway.  Something else is going on now, with me &#8211; a more conscious searching, I think.<\/p>\n<p>I&#8217;m trying to be open to receiving gifts, messages &#8211; I am trying not to close myself off &#8211; even though I have a lot of sadness &#8211; I remember that piece on masks, read to us at the Happening retreat in high school, about God splashing moonlight onto our pillows, basically screaming at us, &#8220;I&#8217;m here!  Here I am!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>I want to be open to all that.  That comfort, that sense of a pattern.  I can feel myself becoming bitter.  Hard.  Mad.<\/p>\n<p>The books I am reading now:  <u>Brief History of Time<\/u>, <u>Schroedinger&#8217;s Cat<\/u> &#8230;. Quantum mechanics.  Like &#8230; WHAT?<\/p>\n<p>Cosmology and quantum physics.<\/p>\n<p>I can&#8217;t even begin to understand the arithmetic, but I <u>groove<\/u> on the concepts.<\/p>\n<p>Like the particles Stephen Hawking describes falling into black holes &#8211; pairs &#8211; those damn <u>pairs <\/u>&#8211; that keep recurring and recurring throughout nature &#8211; pairs, eternally circling around one another &#8211; crashing, annihilating, creating &#8211; <u>a constant dance of two <\/u>&#8211; and then &#8211; one gets pulled into the black hole.  They are separated.  And the one that is not pulled in, is somehow &#8230; well &#8230; there is evidence, then, that some things <u>do<\/u> escape from black holes.<\/p>\n<p>The power of TWO.<\/p>\n<p>I have no idea what the hell I am talking about.<\/p>\n<p>But on a very down-to-earth human level &#8211; I can see a metaphor in all of this for the human condition.  (<i>Ed.:  Hey, Sheila &#8230; let&#8217;s go grab some margaritas&#8230;<\/i>)  It goes all the way down to the micro-level, and we can never get to the center of it.<\/p>\n<p>It&#8217;s my &#8220;religion&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>It makes me think of Madeleine L&#8217;Engle&#8217;s Christian books &#8211; the one she wrote on &#8220;Christian art&#8221; &#8211; To her, it doesn&#8217;t matter if it&#8217;s a Jew who produced it &#8211; if it&#8217;s &#8220;good art&#8221;, then, for her, it is affirmation of the Christian tradition.<\/p>\n<p><u>I certainly do NOT agree with this<\/u>.  Who gives a crap if it&#8217;s a pagan, a Jew, a Muslim, a Christian, or a raging Marxist freak?  If it&#8217;s good art, it&#8217;s good art.  Madeleine L&#8217;Engle is a Christian &#8211; she&#8217;s also an artist &#8211; so she feels that she must see all great art through a Christian filter.  <u>Yuk<\/u>.  She is searching, in her own way &#8211; trying to make sense of why and how someone who doesn&#8217;t believe what she believes could make a work of art that she responds to spiritually.  There is something <u>very distasteful <\/u>to me in all of that.  However, she is my favorite writer.  So I read her theological diatribes about Christian art anyway.<\/p>\n<p>My view is:<\/p>\n<p>It&#8217;s all about the <u>search<\/u>.  Regardless of what you believe.  If you believe nothing, if you believe in Allah, if you believe in God, if you believe in wine, women and song &#8230;<\/p>\n<p>Sam always says to us in acting class &#8211; &#8220;The question is not:  Do I <u>feel<\/u> it?  The question is: Am I <u>searching<\/u>?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Or like Tennessee Williams wrote in <i>Camino Real<\/i> &#8211; I think this is my favorite Williams line ever:  &#8220;<u>Make voyages.  Attempt them.  That&#8217;s all there is.&#8221;<\/u><\/p>\n<p>Back to 7th Avenue:  I was at some sort of nadir.  Walking down that street.  I felt like I was falling into a black hole.  Separated from the other half of my &#8220;pair&#8221; &#8211; now we were separated &#8211; by an entire universe &#8211;<\/p>\n<p>It was so hot.  The air had a still and stagnant quality to it.  I remember thinking: How the hell am I going to get through this night?<\/p>\n<p>The sky was really weird &#8211; and sort of an optical illusion.  It was this musky blue color &#8211; spreading across the whole sky &#8211; as flat and unmoving as the air.  It didn&#8217;t look like a storm was coming.  The sky didn&#8217;t have that unhealthy swollen look.  It was flat.  TOTALLY flat.<\/p>\n<p>The illusion part was that the blueness I saw was <u>not<\/u> just the sky &#8211; as I first thought &#8211; but clouds too.  And haze.  All pasted together up there.  Haze &#8211; clouds &#8211; sky &#8211; all on the same plane.  With no depth.  What I was looking at was a cloud cover.  <u>Not <\/u>the blue of the atmosphere.  But it all seemed to be ONE.<\/p>\n<p>And here is how the illusion revealed itself to me :  it looked like there was a <u>rip <\/u>in the sky.<\/p>\n<p>No.  Not a rip.  More like &#8211; a tear.  Or like &#8211; <u>something<\/u> had been ripped, and then pasted back on, or taped on over the blue &#8211; and the edges of this ripped piece of blue paper were pink.  So high high high up &#8211; was this jagged outline.<\/p>\n<p>In all the flat blue monotony &#8211; there it was &#8211; this bright pink rip &#8211; a rip in the sky.<\/p>\n<p>I looked up at it at just the right moment.  20 seconds later, the sky had shifted, and the pink rip wasn&#8217;t as dramatic or clear.  In seeing that pink, with the musky blue in front of and behind it &#8211; I could see that the entire sky was actually covered with this opaque haze.  The blue I had been looking at was not actually the sky, it was just an <u>illusion <\/u>of sky.  But without the perspective\/context of the pink rip up there, you never would have been able to tell.  It LOOKED like all that blue was actually blue atmosphere.<\/p>\n<p>To me, in the state I was in, the crisis, the nadir, whatever &#8211; (I&#8217;m a little lamb who&#8217;s lost in the wood &#8211; someone to watch over me) &#8211; that bright pink rip in the sky was the equivalent of God splashing the moonlight on oblivious pillows &#8211; To me, it was &#8220;God&#8221; showing itself to me.  To all of us, actually.  Quietly.  No big fanfare.  A quiet message, way up in the sky, saying, &#8220;Hey there.  I&#8217;m here.&#8221;  You might miss it.  I might have missed it.  Even if you saw the pink rip and thought, &#8220;Oh, how cool&#8221;, you might miss the deeper truth being revealed.<\/p>\n<p>Sheila &#8211; what is that truth?<\/p>\n<p>I think that the truth is not limited to houses of worship, or Bibles, or Torahs, or Korans.  It&#8217;s about the human race.  It&#8217;s about love.  It&#8217;s about beauty in all things.  The miracle of life.  The unexplained mystery of our universe.<\/p>\n<p>Seeing God up in the sky certainly didn&#8217;t change my life, or make things better.  I still wonder if I will ever feel excitement like I felt during that summer  when all still seemed possible.  But, still &#8211; it was like I had a moment of awareness.  A moment of awareness of love, in the middle of the nadir.  Something called out to me: &#8220;Look up!  Look up!&#8221;  And I did.  And I got a message.  I felt like <u>something<\/u> was communicating to me.<\/p>\n<p>Trying to express this in human words is an exercise in futility.  It sounds so &#8230; sentimental.  Or &#8230; new agey.  Or whatever.<\/p>\n<p><u>The Desiderata:<\/u><br \/>\nI am a child of the universe<br \/>\nI have a right to be here<br \/>\nWith all its sham, drudgery and broken dreams<br \/>\nIt is still a beautiful world.<\/p>\n<p>That says it best.  That says it best.<\/p>\n<p>Parables.  Extended metaphors.  Talismans.  Symbols.  Stories standing in for the truth.<\/p>\n<p>The experience of God should be kept abstract.<\/p>\n<p>Let the mystery remain a mystery.<\/p>\n<p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>This Diary Friday entry is a bit heavy, perhaps. But hey &#8211; Sometimes life be heavy. Sometimes life be light. It is from the summer of 1998. It has to do with some revelations (incoherent, at times) that I had, &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.sheilaomalley.com\/?p=131\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[5],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.sheilaomalley.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/131"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.sheilaomalley.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.sheilaomalley.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.sheilaomalley.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.sheilaomalley.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=131"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/www.sheilaomalley.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/131\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":51656,"href":"https:\/\/www.sheilaomalley.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/131\/revisions\/51656"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.sheilaomalley.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=131"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.sheilaomalley.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=131"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.sheilaomalley.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=131"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}