”You shall not look through my eyes either, nor take things from me, You shall listen to all sides and filter them from yourself.” Walt Whitman When I think I am doing something of importance with gusto, like trying to garden pompous flowers in a stately fashion, or when I am engaged in gobbledygook while some viper ideas coil inside taught-topics in a semi-circle around my head, I stop and listen to the raging wind, which makes me shiver, and I examine second-hand wishes. “Who needs a perfect skeleton without flesh, lungs that breathe, or a heart beating inside? Wouldn’t you rather be a roofless ghost, far-fetched and free, haunting fresh horizons, to sneak through unconsecrated rubbles? Wouldn't you rather look at things as if seeing them for the first time? There are still mysteries, not penetrated, waiting inside the tiniest particles and the coarsest grains of creation.” "So true," I nod. "Why borrow others’ agony? Neither a great strategy nor originality, scavenging through already polished concepts. This identity in ink, so sweet a thought, yet it deserves a life lived in abandon. Otherwise, it’s nothing more than prostrating in front of a saffron-clad mountaintop figure who thinks he has all the answers but cannot even speak." So, elated by the wind's counsel that pierced through to my soul, I go back to my houseplants, and forget about crushing the tiny weed emerging heartily at the base of the Kaffir Lily inside a flowerpot to reflect on my good fortune of having heard the raging wind. |