December 2, 2013

Victoria

Victoria
(Don't you dare call her Vicky)
You have given me the space tonight
By your beautiful Smile
Your pleasant Southern Voice
and well-intentioned listening
To relive the most harrowing and best month
Of my life on earth. 
So while I may have left you with a small scallop necklace
It is I that is grateful. 
You have shone a fresh light
Into an otherwise routine set of anecdotes
You allowed exposition on ideas that are not easily
Deciphered in an elevator pitch. 
"Oh I went on this trip to Spain for a month"
"I walked the Camino de Santiago - have you heard of that?" (As I wince)
No, I got to speak of Joe
Of my family
My faith
Of that moment atop O Cebriero
When my life had a compass bearing again
I got to tell my story of Cristina
And seeing James' bones
I spoke of it all magnanimously
And with purpose
Because I'm proud of it all
So Vicky
Sorry I can't help it
Victoria - 
Wear the little shell close to your heart
It's travelled thousands and thousands of and thousands of steps 
since being found on the pathway
Touch it when you need a reminder
That you're already on your Camino
It started the moment the stirring began inside you
You can train by choosing to be the better version of yourself tomorrow
And do your best to believe in other people. 

November 29, 2013

Ultimately, I can't help but trace this back to you
More and more as the months drag on,
I arrive in the familiar and all-too-telling location
Next to your memory. 
I miss the place you had in my life
More than anything. 
How you let me take care of you
How we danced around the kitchen
While you cooked 
How you were someone I could miss
And someone I could love
How you could absorb all the giving
I was willing to give
I felt so deeply that I needed to outwardly show you 
How much I cared
To perform it in front of you
To tap dance for my lover
So she wouldn't leave. 

No ones ever shown me how to love
I've never learned what adult love really is
Or, if I have,
I'm terrible at it. 
Tragically and woefully terrible. 
So congratulations!
You've still managed to shine a Mirror
To Myself
I again see the Little Boy there
Ready to dance. 

"Yeah - exactly."

This is nothing quite so human
Than the first breath beyond a broken heart
The flag waiving, limping
Dejected breath
The Reminder and Alarm
all at Once
Of One's own fleeting humanity.

I feel so impossibly behind everyone else
No matter how I see it
The latest Bout
Was like being called up to the major leagues
For a single day.
Why am I so undeserving of Romantic Love
From someone I respect and desire?
Why are my actions, all done in the spirit of support,
Always perceived as "too" much?
Why am I the last man standing
Walking
Down Columbus Ave 
Medicating with Music?
Songs come on,
I say "Yeah - exactly"
And exhale.
I am drawing in my fences again. 
To Life:
Why must you do this to Me?

November 28, 2013

Thankful

It is so beautifully diverse 
In opinion
In look
And still so almost-similar
These tenths of percentages of difference
That separate he from his aunt
Create enough space by which
Love and real care can flood in
A life enveloped in family is a life worth living
The lofty pursuits of career and culture
Are not unlike chasing the elusive first high
The needle never feels as good the second, third, fourth, or fifth time around
The pills never as potent 
I don't speak from experience 
But all who have raged with those demons
Say the same thing:
The first taste is the best. 
Yet family can age and transform
And seeing a cousin weep in front of us
Over her lost sister
The prayer, over our food,
Looks in both directions:
Thank You for what we will eat
Together
And use to work on our future benefit
And at the same token
Thank You for the gift 
Of all those before
Those silent, large-looming figures
Such as Gabriel, or in my own life,
Donald
Who are the backs upon which we stand. 
It is beautiful the way we as a people remember
The way breaking bread with our blood
Seems to be instinctive and necessary
I return home full of not only belly but of life
A slice of pie in an otherwise insular group of people
The laughter is sincere
The well wishes are doubly so
So today, Donald and Delia
I toast to your memory
Not a holiday will ever go by 
Where you aren't thought of
And deeply missed. 
The family to me is fascinating
In it's inability for me to read
The family is not something we chose
These groups of people are thrown together without any other criteria than genetics
And from this connection
Comes support
Boundless selflessness
Laughter
Humility
And respect. 
We check in with those elder than us
And bask in our achievements
I marvel at their wisdom
Their prowess for cooking
Their ability to mean what they say
To say what they mean. 
Layla, I hope more than anything at this moment
That your sister and Gabriel are indeed enjoying Thanksgiving somewhere "up there" as you put it
You deserve it, as do they
And today of all days,
I am so thankful to have shared a table
With your beautiful family
While I think of my own
And it's own beautiful moments 
And diverse people. 
Family is all we've got
And it's all we need. 
I am done living in fear
Over something real I feel
In fear of it's rejection. 
Never again. 

November 21, 2013

Chili

3 can diced tomatoes
1 large can crushed tomatoes
1 large can kidney beans
1 reg can white beans
1 med pkg stew meat
1.5 lbs 80/20 ground beef lean to fat
1 white onion
1 large bar hershey's dark chocolate
4 large carrots
2 bottles of high alcohol chocolate stout
1 large bottle of cayenne pepper sauce
2 shallots
4 garlic cloves
1 cup sugar
Salt
Pepper
oregano
cumin
1 large red pepper
1 large yellow pepper
1 large green pepper

In large heated saucepan on high, add stew meat, and cook until all sides are browned. 
In large pot with steep sides, add crushed tomatoes and diced tomatoes, salt and pepper, heat on medium
Once browned, add stew meat to large pot.
Add ground beef to saucepan, brown meat as well. Finely chop the meat as it cooks, so few large clumps remain. Add punch of salt and pepper to meat.
Add ground beef to pot.
Add kidney beans, white beans to pot.
Finely chop garlic, shallots, onions, add to pot
Dice peppers and add to pot
Add 2 bottles of beer to pot, turn heat to high until boil. (about 12 minutes)
Once boil is achieved, reduce to low for simmer.
Add chocolate bar and half bottle of cayenne pepper sauce, stir and cover. Let cook for 10 minutes.
Taste, add more cayenne sauce for desired spiciness.
Add 1/2 cup sugar, stir, and taste for desired sweetness.
Cook on low for at least 2 hours, stirring every 15 minutes, scraping bottom.  Optimal cook time is 3 hours.

The best damn chili you've ever, ever eaten.  I promise you.
I need a record player as soon as possible
And Astral Weeks on vinyl
Sundays will be perfection
Sweet smells of whatever I'm cooking
Red Wine Flowing
Dark Beer flowing
I believe I have transcended

November 16, 2013

Just call me the Hoover Dam
Because there's a lot
Being held back
And trickled out
Bit by bit

The List

I made a list of things I want to put in my new apartment
The what-would-I-always-want-for-all-reasons-occasions
It starts with "ice cube trays"
Followed by "record player"
It's not a wish list, but more of a checklist
There's "small bar" on there
And "mop"
More than anything, I want to make a space
That I can feel wrapped and rapt in
The place that is home
This entire journey began 19 months ago
On Mercer Street, between Bleecker and West 3rd St.
Where I had my life completely flipped upside down
Where I paused, looked around to soak it in
And watch as the Pit in My Stomach,
Now completely unnecessary
Was regrettably handed his pink slip
And Evaporated.

You don't need a Pit in your stomach
About moving South, about uprooting and leaving
About desperate attempts to change someone's mind
That had already made her mind up
When she drops you like a bag of potatoes.
The Pit, as redundant as the office worker
Absorbed in the merger
Who's counterpart in the existing company
Already does her job.

You don't need a Pit
When you look around
To see the indifferent faces of NYU students
And realize that very few people give a damn about this
And while you are loved by so many
thankful for this
You and you alone must wipe off the dust from the boots
And take the next step.

There is no Pit
When you call your sister
Your Mother
Your Father
Your friend Ann
And you break it to them
That you lost her
And you probably didn't have to
If you had only bothered to at least
Entertain the idea
Of talking about the Future
And formulate a plan
To move up and onward.

You don't need a Pit
When you start rationalizing to others and yourself
That it ALL had to do with WHAT you do for a living
And a salary line
Even when you cringe each time you verbalize it
Knowing that it's bullshit.
But when the lines go silent afterwards
What else is one to think?

There's no Pit
When you can't eat
Taste buds dead and decayed
Nothing ruins the taste of peanut butter
Than unrequited love, Charlie Brown.

There's no Pit
When you do indeed take that one step forward
And another
And another
And the finality of the situation
Provides this peace and serenity
The cabs and walkers all return to slow motion
And you hit shuffle
Dig the inner earphones deep
And the choreography that is New York, NY
Commences.

There's no Pit
When there's nothing at stake anymore.

At the bottom of my list
The what-would-I-always-want-for-all-reasons-occasions
I have now written
"Grown Up"
It's immediately preceded by
"Xbox"
Fair enough.


October 22, 2013

Writing Exercise: Midnight Train to Georgia / The Boxer

The city ate her up and spit her back out
And she waved her white flag at me, seething
She's leaving the left coast, limping and bleeding
She's leaving without ever really succeeding

She's gonna root near her roots
And make home near her home
She's leaving and wants me to follow her down.
Always another adventure to see
Always another request made of me
A time and a place she needs me to be
Chasing the girl who chases the dream

So here we go again
I'm buying in with money I would never spend
Leaping without looking at the water's edge

We held a yard sale to sell off some stuff
We put our lives out on the lawn 'til I'd had enough
These things, they still matter; they still mean a great deal to me
Time has taught me that this life is fleeting
And I'm happiest when I'm not kicking and screaming
So as the iPod on shuffle plays "Don't Stop Believing"
I weep.

I'm grey and get greyer with each passing year
And the years start to tumble together, it's clear
I still feel 18
Still feel so 18 and green.

September 16, 2013

Boy on a broken block
Shuffles his backpack, wears it
Backwards on his front
So the books won't hurt his back

September 11, 2013

The Tina Effect

Tina is the name of the first woman in New York that I asked out following my difficult breakup with Lucy.  She was pretty, quirky, she liked the same music as me, and made me laugh, and so I decided to ask her to dinner.

After four dates, it seemed forced and strange.  She kept agreeing to see me, kept letting me pay for dinner, kept laughing and saying she had a great time, and also never showed me signs that her interest increased beyond that surface stuff.

And she was doing me a great service, because I didn’t really like Tina.  She did this strange animal voice and rudely cut off conversation.  I also wasn’t that physically attracted to her.  This isn’t a knock to her, she’s pretty, just not the person I saw myself desiring and wanting that I expect as a potential partner.

Yet through this I persisted.  I agreed to a fifth date, I talked to her friends, I kept going on and on and eventually went ahead and kissed her.  It was uneventful and not passionate.  I was trying so hard for a woman I didn’t want, who didn’t want me, who allowed me to pursue her, while I myself did not want to pursue her.

And then comes the crux of the situation - Tina says she doesn’t feel the spark “physically” that she really needs and thinks we should be friends.  Well, exactly.  Same here.  But somehow I got offended.  I got hurt slightly.  My pride, more than anything, got wounded.  But why?!  This is a woman I did not want, who I did not even lust after, who I found to be mildly frustrating.  Why?

Because Me dating is a performance. No different than being on a stage acting out lines.  I say things I have never, ever said to people while I’m on a date.  Phrases like “fair point, fair point” I say when a woman says something I blatantly disagree with, so as not to stir the pot.  I have never uttered those words in conversation, ever!  Louis C.K. says men are 8 guys in one on a date, and he’s right.  It’s so hard to feel comfortable in my own skin when I’m with a woman, because I immediately feel she wants me to dance like a fool on stage, “dance, monkey, dance!” “Show me why I should like you.”  The pressure is on me to impress them, not the other way around.  The power sits with them, and I pay for everything, never try to be confrontational, and am this vanilla and nondescript nice guy, who isn’t heavily one thing or another, and tries to downplay his own accomplishments and passions, under the expectation that I might be coming off as a braggart.

They, meanwhile, in my view, can sit back as the Don Corleone of the situation and decide whether or not to invest in me.  I’m the pharmaceutical salesman of the dating world.  She doesn’t squirm, she doesn’t waver, she speaks confidently about her life and her passions, states her opinions on topics, and doesn’t care if I’m not familiar with them.  She knows I’m pursuing and therefore sits back and gets pursued.

I’m not angry or upset about this phenomenon, because I create it.  I set up that dichotomy and perpetuate it over the course of a few dates.  I set up the situation where I have never been myself on a date, not even for an instance, and she in turn is pretty sure that she doesn’t like who I am or isn’t sure who I am.  She knows, however, that I’m a good guy, and she’s right.  I know I’m one of the all-time good ones.  And in life I’m on point with so many things that are important to me, and I’m successful and ambitious.  But it never comes through, because I was too busy performing.

Because I’m performing, I want to please whomever I’m acting for, and in the case here, it’s Tina.  So a rejection by Tina is a rejection of my own dating style, the person I worked so hard to project, but was never really me.  It led me to pursue women (there are a bunch more, trust me) who I didn’t really want, who are perfectly nice and attractive, but not for me.  There’s nothing wrong with them, but they are not right for me.  Nor am I for them.  But I always persist.

I don’t know how to stop the Tina Effect.  Maybe I never will.  I always know my encounters with women go better when I’m surrounded by friends, because I can be myself, snarky, darkly funny, and passionate.  They can see me get out of my seat because of a song lyric or movie quote.  I can gesticulate and sing and point at others.  I can be me: loud, observant, funny me.  I don’t worry about being “found out” to be a chubby unsuccessful loser, something I act on a date to avoid (it’s also not true).

I think the real byproduct of the Tina Effect on me is I’m 30 and single, and nearly everyone else around me is not.  It’s not the worst thing, because I am totally free to come and go, but I definitely long to share my life with someone, well, the right one.  And my biggest regret this year is letting a few really quality women fall through my fingertips because I haven’t been able to move past the Tina Effect.  I have been so busy performing that I never got the chance to enjoy their company, to soak in the present moment, and see for myself how I felt.  In turn, they politely declined to see me again.  I had it coming.

September 6, 2013

On Teaching, updated

John Schmitt
Personal Statement
Masters of Arts, Adolescent Education – Social Studies

In March of this year, I left my life as a successful musician and songwriter living in Brooklyn to spend 4 weeks walking the Camino de Santiago in northern Spain. During this time I walked over 500 miles in rural villages, climbed a dozen mountains, made friends with people from all over the world, and experienced more living in 4 weeks than most do in forty years.

One day in particular, I was due to climb the mountain O Cebreiro, the most daunting and famous ascent on the Camino. The night before I had learned of the bombing at the Boston Marathon, and the tragedy weighed on me in a palpable way, so much in fact that I insisted on walking alone that day. I had taken up distance running less than a year ago, and the running community had welcomed my friends in America and me with open arms; we had enveloped our lives in a culture of positivity, health, and support. That the very community I had come to cherish was the one attacked by an act of terrorism only made the tragedy sting more. I decided to “carry” my running friends and community with me, both in thought and prayer, and ascend mighty O Cebreiro.

After 5 miles of relentless climbing, I reached the top of the mountain, and the vast expanse of Galicia lay out in front of me. I thought of all the dreams cut short today, not just in loss of life and injury, but those who had trained for years to triumph in Boston, only to have the race stopped and marred by this senseless act. At the same time I thought of a discussion I’d had with another pilgrim who told me the most important thing one must do upon completing the Camino is to take the lessons home with you, to be the change you wanted to see in others.

In that moment atop O Cebreiro, I vowed to be an instrument of change in this world, to work to educate children on the lessons of the past, and to get to work on it as soon as I got back. I would be a history teacher so this sort of thing might stop happening, so that our children can possibly break the cycle of killing and fear.

My favorite teachers in both high school and college were all history teachers who instilled in me a great understanding of historical cause-and-effect. I learned that by understanding the lessons of the past, as they relate to the present, we can shape and hopefully better our future. I believe the role of social studies educators is crucial in helping form this better future, and I know that this is my calling in life.

Current educators and teachers that I know have told me that this is "not the time" to get into the profession. Instead of deterring me, this sentiment only fuels my desire to take up the challenge of educating our children at a time when budgets, resources, and opportunities seem to be less and less. Now more than ever, we have a duty to ensure that the students are always our main focus so we can continue to better their futures.

Upon obtaining my Masters of Arts in Adolescent Education in Social Studies, along with my New York State Teachers Certification, I will begin work immediately on educating our youth and use my talents in music to enhance the classroom experience. I will also volunteer my talents and experience with distance running and baseball to coach students and promote an active lifestyle after school.

In every encounter of my professional life, whether it be volunteering at Mt. Sinai Hospital playing music for the Pediatric Floor, my work as a music teacher in Palo Alto, CA, or time spent amongst my wonderfully large family, I have found an absolute love of and connection with children.  I am motivated by their positive energy, have a great affinity for watching them blossom and grow, and want to be a part of that process.  I wish not only to educate them academically but seek to be a supportive role model and mentor.  Through my work I hope to stay true to the promise I made to myself atop O Cebreiro many weeks ago: to better our world, one child at a time.

August 24, 2013

3:28 AM

I sleep a peace tonight
In the filling up
Maximum capacity
Of my satiated soul
All good things come
After 3 A.M.
Chords resolve
My name appears in songs
And credits roll on another 
Spin around the earth. 
I took care of my body today
And found a medium sized comfort
In what I took in, and enjoyed
And I worked my legs until they ached
My lungs til they ached
My fingers until they ached
My eyes til they ached
In the soreness 
I've come to enjoy
Is the satisfaction
That I took advantage of
Every minute today
The room is tidy
Laundry is done
Money in the bank
Clients satisfied
Surrounded by a peace
I scaled mountains to find
And bring home. 
See you, Tomorrow. 

August 22, 2013

Why I want to be a Teacher

John Schmitt
Personal Statement

In March of this year, I left my life as a successful musician and songwriter living in Brooklyn to spend 4 weeks walking the Camino de Santiago in northern Spain.  During this time I walked over 500 miles in rural villages, climbed a dozen mountains, made friends with people from all over the world, and experienced more living in 4 weeks than most do in 40 years.

One of the many things I took away from going on this historic pilgrimage was a clear understanding of what I wanted to do with my life.  I vowed to be an instrument of change in this world, to work to educate children on the lessons of the past, and to get to work on it as soon as I got back.  It is my goal to teach history and social studies to adolescents.

My favorite teachers in both high school and college were all history teachers that instilled in me a great understanding of historical cause-and-effect.  I learned that by understanding the lessons of the past, as they relate to the present, we can shape and hopefully better our future.  I believe the role of social studies educators is crucial in helping form this better future, and I know that this is my calling in life.
When I have told those around me my desire to become an educator, I was told numerous times that this is "not the time" to get into the profession. Instead of deterring me, this sentiment only fuels my desire to take up the challenge of educating our children at a time when budgets, resources, and opportunities seem to be less and less.

Upon obtaining my Masters of Arts in Adolescent Education in Social Studies, along with my New York State Teachers Certification, I will begin work immediately on educating our youth, and use my talents in music to enhance the classroom experience.  I will also volunteer my talents and experience with distance running and baseball to coach students and promote an active lifestyle after school as well.

I am incredibly excited at the potential opportunity to study and become an educator.

August 20, 2013

Hubris from Icarus to Richard Nixon

There is a Truth learned by the Broken:
That loving righteously without pretense
Or condition,
And then the subsequent distortion
Or unfortunate circumstances
Or abuse
Of said love,
Ultimately leading to its Death,
Are overwhelmingly worth
The overwhelming pain.

If I am not guided by Principles

By concepts I believe can propel and push
Me and my fellow Man forward
Concepts like Infinite Patience in Sight of Family or Strained Friendships
Concepts like 
Relationships no longer being transactions between two people
No longer being equivocation, 
One hand giving
And the other awaiting repayment
Concepts like love being an outward force
The pushes outward out of necessity
And not to attain or capitalize 
On someone else's vulnerability;
Well, if I am not guided by these Principles,
Then am I any less Awake than the lazy dog
That sits outside?
Is there any distinction between he and I
Besides the fact that I live for my brothers and sisters
For my Family and Lover
For my God and my Truth?
It is the only separation.

Therefore,

If I reap the benefits and blessings
Of my Principle-Guided Life
Which brings another kindred soul
To walk my path with me
For no matter how long
Then, though parting is such deep sorrow,
I am forever grateful for this Gift.

We must not stack up our outward gifts as trophies

They do not exist within us anymore
We give freely, without condition
And the receiver chooses to do as he or she sees fit.
Gifts of self to others 
Should never be gateways to Overweening Pride
The Hubris that brought down
Everyone from Icarus
To Richard Nixon

So we, the Broken

Were never any less perfect
Than before
Our Truth lies in the cracks.
It forms in the aftermath
Of others who swung the Hammer.

July 24, 2013

30s

I'm going to be a high school Social Studies teacher.
I'm going to run a marathon. 
I'm going to weigh under 200 pounds. 
I'm going to fluently speak Spanish. 
I'm going to walk the Camino del Norte.
I'm going to release a new album, work towards it's success, and grow my music career. 
I'm going to meet a beautiful, intelligent, compassionate woman with whom we will share our lives. 
I will save money, but not obsess about it. 
I will be a man for others, and not accept silence or estrangement as means of dealing with other people. 
I will embrace my new decade of life with a ferocity, vigor, and grace that it will shine a humble light to others around me. 

July 18, 2013

O Cebreiro

Three weeks into walking the Camino, you're a hardened veteran.  You have seen and been so many places, braved every element (most notably the temperamental Spanish weather), been lost, alone, weeping, laughing, screaming, running, crawling - living.  Your feet, once a constant source of fatigue, pain, and therefore, attention, now glide underneath you. It was at this point where "the Camino walks YOU" as Aussie Joe told me.  I was beginning to see what he meant.

I had just left Villafranca around 8am after little sleep.  Last night around 7pm I learned that someone had bombed the Boston Marathon, and details were hazy.  Friends of mine had checked in on social media to say they were safe, others I still hadn't heard from.  No one knew who had done it or why, but I feared the worst. The worst, for me, would be a Muslim fundamentalist terrorist, stoking the fire of another prolonged war for my country and theirs.  It was making me physically ill.  I wasn't sure how Obama would respond in this situation - after all, we never thought Bush was going to be the War Hawk he turned out to be.  I was restless and anxious as I stayed up until 1am.  In non-Camino terms, it's like staying up until 6am.  Most pilgrims are asleep around 10.

The bombing to me, for many reasons, was crushing.  Besides the senseless loss of life, and the potential for a steeper armed conflict to arise, the hardest thing for me to deal with was the population that was attacked: runners.

You see, I started running about 8 months prior, and had just completed my first half marathon: 13.1 miles of glory running through Washington, DC.  I finished in 2 hours, 28 minutes, all despite sciatica in my lower back, a blood blister on my toe, and friction burns on my inner thigh that was later classified as more a wound than a skin abrasion.

Leading up to this race, I spent three months running in blizzard conditions in Buffalo, also running with friends in New York, and did 5 other races of varying distances.  I joined the New York Road Runners, and began to run a race every other week or so.  I found a community of people of all shapes, sizes, and abilities, who cared not about how fast you were, what shoes you wore, or what your religion or politics were.  They were all always encouraging and open.  The running community embraced my friends and me with open arms, and we now had this subculture we could dive into, with medals, T-shirts, and most importantly, health all as trophies.

That the community welcomed us all was never lost on me, and any chance I got to spread the similar love to other folks, I would.  The last mile of every race, when I typically gun it, I cheer on those around me, telling them they "got this!" Or to "keep it up!"  Yes, I am that guy.

So when I stood in line to get my medal engraved at the finish line at RFK Stadium in Washington, and a man who had just finished the marathon was standing next to me, I couldn't help myself. 

"Hey man, congrats on the marathon! What was your time?" He said something like 3 hours, 30 minutes.  "Wow, I can't imagine. I mean, I'm hobbled and I only did half of what you did.  That's incredible." And I meant it.  I couldn't imagine having to run that same distance again after just finishing it.  The crowning athletic achievement of my life to that point, was only half of what this man had just run, and much faster than I. However, it was his response to me that typifies the runners' culture.

"Hey, thanks very much.  You know, 13.1 is no joke either.  You should be really proud of yourself," as he put his hand on my shoulder.  I muttered out a thank you, as most compliments I ever receive make me squirm.

And that was the extent of our conversation, and he was off somewhere, and I to meet my friends for our free post-race beer.

It was this man's world, and seemingly my world: one of health, tolerance, acceptance, respect, and joy in movement, that had been so mercilessly attacked.  That is why it affected me so deeply.

Everything this morning was about Boston for me.  It was also O Cebreiro day. On the Camino, while we typically had been finding days to walk alone, or speed ahead, there was a clear understanding that this climb, by far the steepest on the entire trip, was going to test our mettle and our mental toughness.  There would be no maverick loners on this climb.  We would go at it together.  So we thought.

I left in the morning praying the rosary quietly to myself, for those hurt and affected by the bombing, as I walked down the valley, along a motorway, inching closer and closer to the final province on the Camino: Galicia.  Arrival in O Cebreiro, at the top of the mountain would be the gateway to the final 180 km to Santiago.  I prayed for restraint by my government, for not rushing to judgement, for all those runners who had their glory day ruined.  I prayed as if an innocent person or animal had been slaughtered, my heart heavy and very sad.  While I did not walk alone per se, I made it clear in broken Spanish to Pedro and Manuel that I wished to walk "solo," and then showed them the rosaria I was using to pray.  They understand immediately, and motioned about a bomb and "Boss-tone." "Si, si, Boston. Soy un ..." And then I made a runners motion, and they understood.  These were my people, my new friends, who had been hit.  They spoke in Spanish, clearly upset, and I was able to make out Manuel saying in disgust "people are fucking crazy." They left me alone and walked on slightly ahead.  I resolved that today's climb, the toughest one to date, would be for my runners, my new friends.  For Boston.

After an hour, my rosary was finished, and I began to socialize more.  Peter, my new friend from Holland, and I walked about 3 hours together, getting to know each other more.  We shared about our lives, our reasons for pilgrimage, and our aspirations for when we were done.  Peter was battling terrible blisters, and was unsure if his body was allow him to climb all the way up O Cebreiro today, but I encouraged him to do so.

We stopped for lunch, ran into Aussie Joe and the Canadian women, and it was also the first time I met Cristina, a beautiful Spanish woman who would walk with us the rest of the way to Santiago.  Joe, a towering man who looks much younger than he is, jaunts along the Camino at a fierce pace.  So much, in fact, that I started to call him "Kanga Joe," after his native kangaroo.  I kept up with him one day on the meseta, the plains that occupy the middle third of the Camino, and just about broke myself.  Out of necessity, I urged him to push on the next day,  and I would meet him at the next town.  Joe and I talked over lunch about Boston, and his views were surprisingly pro-American with respect to foreign policy.  He believed, like his parents, that America is a source for liberty, a necessary counterbalance to the forces of religious extremism, albeit very imperfect.  There's no one that can deny our shortcomings and gross misgivings as a nation, but I too believe this.

Joe also knew that after my climb up to the Iron Cross, outside of Foncebadon, that a Spanish man named Raphael had seen me and described me as climbing like a perro, or dog.  I use my walking poles as third and fourth legs, and with all my might fly up ascents.  I get a great thrill from the climb. And my heart pulsing in my chest was such a beautiful and tangible sign of my own humanity, a graspable feeling of being alive.  So with that knowledge, we talked about the climb that now had come upon us: O Cebreiro was five kilometers away, all straight up.  I was chomping at the bit for it.

"This one's for my running friends, Joe.  I'm not playing around.  I'm putting on music, and getting the hell up there, if I have to crawl."

"I have no doubt in my mind you will get there, John.  What a fitting tribute."

I joked about playing AC/DC's "Thunderstruck" as my unofficial O Cebreiro climbing music, and the Canadians pointed out that they had seen me use my walking poles as drum sticks on the Camino, rocking out to music with them, using the pathway as my own drum set.  I felt the rush of adrenaline as I put my rucksack on.  

Joe, the Canadians, and I all left together, and as soon as the gradient began to rise, I bid them farewell.  I hit play on my iPod, and Angus Young's tapping riff blared in my ears.  "Thunder. Thunder. Thunder." Let's do this!! 

The climb is broken into three sections, with two towns providing temporary relief as you ascend.  Each town had a bar and at least one place to sleep should you decide you were not cut out for the whole climb.  The first two kilometers were by far the worst.  I would climb about ten meters and have to pause to catch my breath.  It was about 85 degrees, humid, and I was sweating profusely.  The path was all loose stone, so every placement of my walking poles, something I relied on for quick and efficient ascent, was shifty and imperfect.  This meant the work was predominantly done by my legs, with little aid of my upper body.  I was gassed as I entered the first town, about 40 minutes later. I took a shirt out of my rucksack, wet it with water, and draped it over my head, then held it in place with my ball cap.  A bottle of water later, I set out again for the second leg.

The next 1.5 kilometers were steep and unrelenting, and I began to wonder if I would ever get to the top.  As a runner, I have learned to not lock sight on the finish line, since my body almost hyperventilates in excitement at seeing the end.  It makes the end much harder, and it's almost painful. For me, I had to stop looking at the end of each switchback and seeing that it just led to another painful switchback.  That's how one's spirit breaks, how one doesn't make it up the mountain.  No, you put your head down, you think of the friends who ran yesterday in Boston, you think of those who will run in Boston next year, you think of those who will never run in Boston but will run elsewhere. You think of how they all cheered you on, made you feel welcome, made you realize 13.1 miles was a great accomplishment, even in the wake of their own 26.2 miles. And after twenty more minutes of pain, you see the next town, this one more equipped for the road weary pilgrim.

I stop for about thirty minutes, enjoy a ice cold coke, and two bottles of water.  I take my shoes off, let the sweat dry off of them, and pose for a photo so I can remember how ridiculous my shirt draped over my head looks.  I then prepped for the last bit, put my shoes on, and bounded out the door of the bar into the Galician afternoon.  I turned to my left, and there Aussie Joe came up the last hill into town, completely soaked in sweat, his teeth grinding as he pushed himself.  We smiled and checked in with each other.  "See you at the top, Joe!!!" I said as I turned and set off. 

To my delight, the last two kilometers into O Cebreiro were nothing of the first 3.5 km.  In fact, by Camino standards, they were quite pleasant.  The paths were dirt, not loose stone, wide, and full of wild herbs and beautiful native flowers of purple, orange, and white.  The views were glorious, and only growing more magnificent as I rounded every corner.  I was feeling strong, motivated, and had an indelible smile on my face.  Like the last mile of my half marathon, this last climb was celebratory, the culmination of all the mental and physicial preparation put in the weeks and months prior.  Not unlike the final stage of the Tour de France, when the riders coast into Paris at a leisurely pace, all of them welcomed as champions. 

I could see the town walls coming up, and I was unsure if I had really reached the top.  I saw a motorway, and a coach parked to the left where folks had gotten out to take photos.  This was common on the Camino, as retirees would hop buses to the "big spots" that we all were walking to.  I didn't see anyone around though, and no markers telling me where I was.  I just knew that the view was unlike anything I've ever seen: so much free beauty, so much life laid out in every direction.  I walked to my left, and saw a cross positioned next to the motorway, and next to it was a middle aged man with scruffy hair writing in a journal as he sat.  I interrupted him as only an American could, and said "Pardon....[pointing to the ground]... O Cebreiro?"  He looked up and said "Si."

"WOOOOO!!!!" I screamed.  I was here, friends.  This was for you.  For all of you.  I took off my rucksack, my hat, my shirt off my head, and knelt at the cross.  Thank you, Great Architect, for everything.  For all this beauty, for my life, for everything I can touch, feel, and smell.  For everything I know, and for all the love in my heart and in the hearts of everyone on this earth.  Thank you for the promise of health, the knowledge that by stressing our bodies and pushing ourselves, we can actualize our best selves.  I vowed at that moment to be a instrument of change in this world, to work to educate children, to get to work on it as soon as I get back.  

I also decided that next year I would run a marathon.

After checking into the hostel and showering, I went into town to find Aussie Joe finally arriving into O Cebreiro.  He outstretched his arms from a distance, and shouted "JOHN! MISSION ACCOMPLISHED!!!" When we met we embraced and laughed. 

"That was insane Joe!" 

"Yes it was! Well done, John! Good on ya!"

Like the running culture, we pilgrims were accepting, welcoming, and enthusiastic.  And the rallying cry of "O Cebreiro" will now and forever be a source of immense personal motivation.  I use it when I feel like I can't go on, when I don't think there's anything left in me to finish something, when I think people are incapable of doing good or helping others.  I use it as motivation when I run races.

Four weeks later, with the help of my new rallying cry, I beat my first half marathon time in Buffalo by over 16 minutes.  I repeated "O Cebreiro, O Cebreiro, O Cebreiro" over and over as I approached the finish.  And it will be my cry as I complete mile 26 and beyond in May of next year.

July 17, 2013

Margarita and My Wrath

I am obese. Like anyone recovering or recovered from an addiction, I will always consider myself afflicted by that which has the power to consume me.  It pervades every aspect of myself, informing my social confidences, my choice of clothing, my career aspirations, my humor, my choice of friends and partners, and my construction of logic.  My mental projection of what others see, for a split second, is always a rotund, sweaty, greasy man, bloated cheeks, double neck, large sausage fingers, and clothing that routinely compensates or attempts to hide the world of hurt underneath.

Medically speaking, I'm still very much obese, just not as morbidly obese as I once was.  I've spent the latter part of 18 months trying to remedy that, by running and eating right - most of the time.  The challenging part of my outward changes were that I still always feel like that fat man: 317.5 pounds of excess, of reckless living.

So when Margarita told Peter that she thinks I eat too much chocolate, in Spanish, and he translated it for me, I felt like I had just been outed. And mercilessly punched in the gut. A light conversation on the loss of weight from the Camino as a result of 15 miles of hiking everyday, brought on by us jumping on a scale at the pharmacy, now seemingly got hijacked by this woman's desire to put me down or point out a flaw.  She saw I was the fat one on the trip.  It was too late.  No one else had mentioned my size, and in fact when I told of my weight loss journey, I reaped the benefits of the pilgrim praise, the promise that my story would motivate them upon returning home, and the keen belief that my vacation in Spain could be spent enjoying foods I otherwise avoided, such as beer, heavy breakfasts, and, of course, chocolate.  Spurred on by the understanding that as a distance runner, one needs to replenish his glucose stores after a workout to avoid crashing - feeling overly drowsy and lethargic - I felt it best to keep my sugar level stable by eating a chocolate bar a day, or almost everyday.

The bars would be whatever I saw, and they always tasted great. They never got old, and in fact, eating them was devoid of any fat man guilt.  I knew I was climbing mountains everyday, knew that no matter how much I consumed on my trip afterwards, I couldn't possibly make up the calories I burned on my trip each day.  The bars would vary in size, depending on how naughty or in need of a reward I felt, but they were always in my rucksack.

So I stood in the square, with my Camino family, as the mid-afternoon sun scorched us.  We were now restocked on medical supplies; I had my tape, Peter his ibuprofen, Pedro and Manuel their prescriptions.  We had just stood on a scale, and joked at how much weight we had lost.  I was down about 7 kg since I left America, or about 15 pounds.  In about 3 weeks.

Margarita motioned for me to spin as Peter told her about my weight loss in Spanish, and she raised a single finger, seemingly to object to his words, and they conversed for a brief time.  She then nodded her head, then bowed it, as if she was content in keeping her words to herself.  It was then that I asked Peter what she said.

I was stunned, and did my best to move past it.  In fact, it was not a factor at our family meal, which was quite memorable.

But the fat man feelings, like they always do, creep in when we are most vulnerable for them.  For me, it was when I was finally alone, in my bed, and the next morning, when I set out alone before sunrise to the next town. I was ashamed of myself, of all the potential lost weight I could have experienced had I not partook in my sweet treats.  Seven kilograms could have been ten, or more.  My desire to be skinny, which comes from the source of who I am, could finally be realized, if only I had displayed even a modicum of will power.  Why even come on this trip if you're just going to live lavishly, I asked.  Why are you here?

This crushing pity party and guilt fest quickly turned to anger.  You see, there's no greater situation for a man upset at his own decisions than having a scapegoat on whom you can deflect, demonize, and scorn.  And deflect, demonize, and scorn I did.  Margarita.

I walked alone, very, very angry, at this slender Spanish woman.  Righteous thoughts entered my mind, like how un-Atticus-Finch of her to assume I had an eating problem.  She knew nothing of my personal journey, the half marathon, the 450+ miles I've logged in the last 7 months running, the days spent logging calories, spent walking for 5 or more hours. She knew nothing of the internal mental constructs I had built as a defense of the fat man feelings.  She knew none of this, and judged my book without reading my pages.  And she crushed me.  

That day, I walked about 30 km in beautiful weather, with no other goal in sight than to find her again, use my translation feature on my phone, and tell her in her own tongue that 15 months ago I weighed 80 pounds more, that I still had a ways to go, and she owed me an apology for rushing to judge me.  I wanted my pound of flesh for her words, for her failure to keep her comments to herself. Moreover, I ditched the chocolate in my bag, and had daydreams of triumphantly proclaiming to her when I saw her: "Guess what, Margarita?! I didn't eat any fucking CHOCOLATE today!!" 

I marched up mountains, past group after group of pilgrims, and said nothing to them.  This is a very un-pilgrim-like practice, as we pass each other often and are expected to wish one another a happy trip, or a good day.  It is one of the most beautiful parts of the whole walk, that constant experience of positivity.  

Not today, I intended to get to my next destination first, to feel accomplished, and wait for that smug Spanish woman to walk into the square, so she could feel my wrath.  Needless to say, I was seething.

I sat in a cafe, one of the only places open during Spanish siesta, well off the main square, and drank a gin and tonic, ate lunch, and watched mindless Spanish television.  I was zoning out between feelings of extreme guilt and anger, each feeding off the other, a shame spiral I haven't experienced in some time.

Then a hand on my shoulder.  I turn.  It's her.  Of all the gin joints in all the world...

She motions if she can sit down, and I immediately feel I am sitting with my doctor, nurse, or teacher.  She knew the real me, the fat man, and I somehow felt I needed to answer to her.

She began to speak in Spanish, and was motioning out the door, to the left.  I recognized "familia de Camino" and "Pedro" and "Manuel."  I got out my translation function on my phone, and began to feverishly type.  Here we go.  "Una momento," I said in terrible Spanish.

It was then she placed her hand on my hand, covering the phone, causing me to look up. "Vamos! Vamos!" She said, and I understood.  We go, come on.

I walk out into the Spanish heat, and there in the square, a mirror image of yesterday: my international friends, my Camino family, all seated around the statue in the square, taking a long respite after a strenuous days walk.  Margarita placed her hand on the small of my lower back, and gently motioned for me to join them.

I was greeted with a prodigal son's welcome, hugs, kisses, and smiles as if I had been gone for months.  The Spanish pilgrims began speaking to Peter, so he could translate for me. 

"They want to know why you went off by yourself today.  They were worried," Peter said.  "We were at breakfast, and Pedro talked about us all as the Camino Family, and then it got quiet."  This line of talk did nothing to calm my feelings of shame.

"And then Margarita said that we were missing one of our family - you."

My heart welled up, and for some reason, I still felt the need for last ditch effort at my ego.  "Well, Peter you can tell Margarita that I didn't eat any chocolate today."

He looked at me funny, and didn't bother to translate it for her. "She didn't mean it like that, John.  She said she thought you would have lost like double what you have if you were not eating so much chocolate."

"Then why did you say that she said I ate too much of it?!" I quipped.

"Because I was feeling rushed in our conversation.  I'm sorry.  Anyways, I hope you will join us for dinner, we've found a place that looks great."

I didn't know what to say or feel.  All that negative energy, all that anger and frustration, a construction of my own insecurity, a byproduct of my own feelings of unworthiness.  I wasted an entire day in paradise, missed chances to connect with others, with the earth, with God.  For nothing.  And now, when I think back, it was a powerful lesson on the rush to judgement.  I had been guilty of the same crime I had accused Margarita of committing to me.  Yet it was I that worked hard to destroy myself, and then tried to destroy someone else.  




July 11, 2013

May 25th, 2014.
Twenty-Six point Two miles
With my Closest Friends

June 28, 2013

Welcome Home

As I walked down the jet bridge, 
into the New York summer sun, 
there was a clear sense over me 
that it was time to get to work. 

June 6, 2013

Outside Albany

The clouds hang in suspension
As we the train riders
Rotate around it
And it floats untouched by man
White on white
Grey shadows
Cottony 
While the green 
Blurs in horizontal lines
The clearings come and go
Showing farmland
Rivers
Rundown factories
Outside Albany
The flowers are blooming
Violets and tiger lilys 
The goslings grow more daring by the day
As the remnants of spring hang on for dear life
The trees are prostrated east
As the tropical storm 3,000 miles away
Whips the forceable wind 
Along the Hudson. 
I always needed luck
To prodigiously descend
And set me free
From the surly bonds of debt
The cripple of routine
Of listlessness
I cried out in frustration
That I could do no more, it would seem
To change this spiral of water-treading
This whole rationale:
That my efforts are exhausted
That there just isn't any room on my shelves
Is so profoundly off-base
So laughable
"If only I had money, my Little Bird"
- Malaika -
"I would marry you"
Well, you climb a few mountains
Order food in a different language
And pray and pray
And pray and pray
And pray and pray
Until suddenly you know
That somewhere
Outside Albany
The suspended clouds
The clearings, the tiger lilys
And the beating heart inside me
Can handle everything 
And anything
You've got in store for me. 
 

May 31, 2013

For Sis

Happy birthday, Elicia
My ever-battle-ready sister
We're the same age now for 2 months
But we know who was born first

May 29, 2013

Reason, Faith, and Revolution

"Christian faith, as I understand it, is not primarily a matter of signing on for the proposition that there exists a Supreme Being, but the kind of commitment made manifest by a human being at the end of his tether, foundering in darkness, pain, and bewilderment, who nonetheless remains faithful to the promise of a transformative love."

T. Eagleton

My Goals, with a giant dash of hope

Hope and pray that these all get done in the next 730 days. Time to get a move on. 

May 18, 2013

My heart is immeasurably heavy
My spirit all but crushed
Things need not be so drastic
So perversely distorted
So lacking of adulthood

I cannot unite that which is against
Itself reuniting. 
I cannot walk through land mines 
Or fear people I love
Or their reactions. 
It is shameful how silly this all can be
How truly solveable it really is
And how we all seem to get off
On the creation and perpetuation
Of estrangement. 


May 10, 2013

Leaning

What a joy to walk in this Pilgrim Way
Leaning on the Everlasting Arms
Oh how bright the path grows from day to day
Leaning on the Everlasting Arms

Leaning, leaning
Safe and secure from all alarms
I'm leaning, leaning
Leaning on the Everlasting Arms

April 17, 2013

La Faba

Although I may have carried my pack from beginning to end
and waited for every Pilgrim in need of encouragement,
or given my bed to one who arrived later than I,
given my bottle of water in exchange for nothing:
if upon returning to my home and work,
I am not able to create brotherhood
or to make happiness, peace and unity,
I have arrived nowhere.

Although I may have had food and water each day,
and enjoyed a roof and a shower every night:
or may have had my injuries well attended,
if I have not discovered in all that the love of God,
I have arrived nowhere.

Although I may have seen all the monuments
and contemplated the best sunsets;
although I may have learned a greeting in every language
or tried the clean water from every fountain;
if I have not discovered who is the author
of so much free beauty and so much peace,
I have arrived nowhere.

If from today I do not continue walking on your path,
searching for and living according to what I have learned;
if from today I do not see in every person, friend or foe
a companion on the Camino;
if from today I cannot recognize God,
the God of Jesus of Nazareth
as the one God of my life,
I have arrived nowhere.


February 22, 2013

The Good Fight

"There I thought about the relentless effort Petrus had made to help me understand that contrary to what we had always been taught, results WERE what counted. One's efforts are salutary and indispensable, but without results, they amount to nothing." P. Coelho

February 21, 2013

A Prayer on High

My Creator, all things are one in You.
In my most human moments,
I am helpless against Gluttony, Lust, and Pride.
I am a contradictory Creature,
Who struggles to realize his own potential.
I am not tireless in the Good Fight,
Nor am I completely immobilized.
Fear, in its most real form,
Still has its hold of me
And can paralyze me.
There are Familiar Holes,
Familiar Chambers of the depths,
That I jump into
On this Frozen Landscape of Eternity:
Those of self-pity, self-hatred, and longing.

I Pity myself for being "behind" those around me,
For being less successful,
For not having the Gifts that others have.
I pity myself for not having incredible closeness with my father,
And for spending the bulk of my life
Chasing supposed Pipe Dreams.

The Self-Hatred is one where I look down at my body,
See very little to no progress,
And in turn reject myself.
I feel shallow, unworthy, and unintelligent here.
I feel hatred toward all the squandered time and energy
Spent on websites, playing games, or doing nothing.
I feel especially angry
At the Person I Once Was,
Because reliving memories
Or looking back
Only makes me cringe.

The Longing Hole
Is one I crawl in
To mask the first Two,
And is often a gateway
To the Other Two.
It is the one with the least to do with Me,
And it is the one where I harm my psyche
The Most.
I am most comfortable here,
O Creator,
Because I can blame someone else,
Or You.
I long to be loved,
To feel closeness,
To be my More Perfect Self,
To write that Transcendent piece of Art,
To help Others.
Yet so much of that is not up to me,
And There Is So Much Comfort In The Blame Game.
As justification for not having what I want
Or not being what I should,
I Either feel sorry for myself
Or deeply hate myself.
O Creator, I do not like these methods,
But it has been all I know.

When I wear my Scallop Shell around my neck,
I feel protected.
It has become a symbol of Immense Power.
It has, more importantly,
Become a Symbol of Immense Mercy.
It provides me the Opportunity to gain perspective
I will take it to be blessed.

My Creator,
I want to be better
I can be better.
I want to live empowered
I want to help others
I want a Family,
A Child,
And to experience real and everlasting Love.
I want all these things,
And in Your Time.
I now stand at a Cliff of a vast Sea
I Once Comfortably called Home:
A Sea of Faith,
Of Destiny,
A Sea of Right and Wrong.
I spent 7 years climbing out
Because I thought I knew a better way.
Now there is only One Way -
Your Way.
I submit
To the Purification of my Mind, Body, and Spirit,
I will need reminders
And to learn Hard Lessons
But here I go,
Into the Water.

Thank You For Everything.

February 19, 2013

I'm still here.

"You also need to look back, not just at the people who are running behind you but especially at those who don't run and never will... Those who run but don't race... Those who started training for a race but didn't carry through... Those who got to the starting line but didn't get to the finish line... Those who once raced better than you but no longer run at all. You're still here. Take pride in wherever you finish. Look at all the people you've outlasted."

-Joe Henderson

February 13, 2013



Home Depot

All will be well
And all manner of things will be well.
My gut tells me enough time has not passed
It is still too fresh
Too angry
And despite your best efforts to honor my requests
Those around you do not
Please know that my heart breaks for our circumstances
And for those beyond my control
And if I weren't trying to put out 5 of my own people's fires
I would return to tackle yours.
You're capable
And this silence, while at times hurtful and strange
Has been helping to heal and return a center to my life
I am not cruel
Nor am I living a moment or hour
Or day
Or week
In anger
But in my distance
Was hoping you would take the time
To D.I.Y.
For whatever it's worth.

February 11, 2013

Reflections Upon Being Home

Take the convolution and make it clear
Take all things that confuse me here
Purify
Get ready
The Walk to Saint James awaits.
Purify your body by Stress
A leaner, lighter Temple within
Simplify.
"My feet is my only carriage"
And so I push on through.
The complex orders of food and drink
Are now handmade by myself
Fresh Fruit, fresh vegetables
Lean meat, Delicious Coffee
And most importantly,
Quality time in the day-to-day
With my beautiful Family.
I hope to be the Great Anchor
That, despite Oceans of Separation,
Can steadily guide them towards each other
By example.

Fruitless pursuits of women,
Showing Mounting desperation
Are now afterthoughts
At the new premise:
She will want me when the time is right
Until then, I turn inward,
Simplify
Because Saint James awaits.

I plead to the Universe
For the resources to be drawn near
So that such a trip is possible.
I plead to all things to be One in Me,
To be simple, to be Honest,
To be real and to be all Life
So I might be a Pilgrim
And Walk the Long Road
To the Rest of my Life.

February 10, 2013

En mi nueva lengua española,
quiero decir inequívocamente:
bastante!
Se realiza.

February 8, 2013

"The Subtle Sensitivity to Human Nuance, Returned"

"EXISTENTIAL LONELINESS WILL NOT DISAPPEAR
BY FINDING OR REPLACING PARTNERS,
CHANGING JOBS,
OR MOVING HOUSE.
IN DISCOVERING WHO WE ARE, THESE OUTER CIRCUMSTANCES
MAY CHANGE, BUT IT IS OUR ABILITY TO OBSERVE
THE CHANGING DRAMAS OF OUR LIFE,
AND THE LIFE OF OTHERS AROUND US,
AGAINST A LARGER BACKDROP,
THAT WILL BRING A UNITED PURPOSE
TO ALL OUR JOURNEYING."
~J. Brierly

February 4, 2013

Playtime is Over.



Beard

Next time I shave will be May 14th when I get back from Europe.

Every time I leave
There's an unending loop
Of
"I am leaving, I am leaving
But the fighter still remains"
Melancholy
Accomplished
Realizing that, bruised,
I head Home
Head held high.

Constantly Constant

I feel weird
And Buffalo is no longer
A place of solidarity
I miss you
Each one of you
And especially You

I tiptoe around
Opportunities to grow up
And maybe I should call more often
But it might be a signal fire
I selectively choose
To take interest, or fight

This is the most uncertain time of my life
And I need to know that you're Constant
That you're constantly Constant

My band of friends travel with me
And I stand after the show
Soaked
And hoarse
And take compliments from strangers
And good friends
And I begin to eye the room
And right there -
STOP THE TAPE -
Right there
My insides crumble
My lungs deflate
Because I can't shake it
or You.

I would discard this bit of me
If I hadn't come to love it so much
Am I selfish for that?
Is it too cheesy to admit
That I would sing for only one person
If you let me?

Crippling debt
Oppressive heat
Unwavering anxiety
And the belief that I'm much better off now
Are my Constantly Constants.

Goodnight, and I am thankful
But, oh, if you knew the depths
The deep depths that still feel warm
If you truly knew the depths
Of what I am capable of
And what I seek in my life
And how I cherish it
You would know how loaded,
How piled on, taped,
Stapled, glued
Jam-packed
Crumbled
How concentrated
My words are
When I say
So simply
And as best I can
That
I
Miss
You.

January 25, 2013

Archeology

I'm digging
Deep

D

e

e

p

through the sediment

the cool bedrock

to the root cause

the uncaused cause

of

W

H

Y.

January 9, 2013

Mantra

Simplify
And immerse in Family
The Camino awaits!









January 6, 2013

True Love Defined

when you're on the outside baby
and you can't get in
i will show you
you're so much better than you know

-Sade, "By Your Side"