Monday, October 26, 2015

            A question we must answer: Why would a person of intellect and awareness want to submit to the will of another, even if that other is God?

              Sometimes I am relaxing, fiddling with the smartphone settings and tinkering with various instructions I am inputting to one device or another. These are some of the tasks that define us now. Who could have imagined this even a few decades ago? And who could have imagined that our children would have in their eager, delicate fingers the quick, decisive taps and swipes that bring smartphones to life and enable them to access information or perform feats that require the cooperation of all these many computers linked through the Internet?

I was watching on the five-inch screen of my smartphone the Disney movie Saving Mr. Banks the other day. It is about the making of Mary Poppins, focusing on how Walt Disney had to lure its author to California and persuade her to sign over the rights. And during the process, we see the creative process. Watching the movie, I remembered where I was during those years when Disney made films I would watch at the Mannering theater in  downtown Middlesboro, Kentucky, mesmerized by the lovely Haley Mills in Parent Trap, which was produced a decade or so before Mary Poppins.

                But the reason Saving Mr. Banks engrossed me was that it includes  an inside look at the Disney studios, what it was like for the creative guys who wrote the music and created the story boards, reading through the script as it evolved. I remember the hurting, yearning place inside me as I would careen down the sidewalk which paralleled  Boomway Hill in Middlesboro on roller skates, feeling the rough vibration rattle up through the long bones in my legs.

                I yearned to somehow be part of the Disney movie experience, and some of my most elaborate daydreams involved me there. I could not imagine it accurately because I didn’t know what the studios looked like, way out there in California. But I felt that yearning. And I suppose this yearning, this intensity of desire for something, is a common experience. Some of us are able to attain our dreams, and others not. Human history is filled with the excruciating pain of being denied. There are the ones who have been abused, crushed, their lives crippled or snuffed by cruel individuals, whether these be powerful rulers, governments, or simply societal rules. For others, the responsibilities and perplexities of life interfere with our attainment of dreams.

                But one question regarding our search for God involves what the Bible speaks of as God’s will for us. That is something that haunts me. It was one of my earliest concerns. I wanted to know what God had planned for me. Standing outside on the crooked sidewalk slab, the concrete slab pushed up by the roots of one of the giant Maples that dappled Dorchester Avenue with their friendly presence. Or perhaps I might more accurately say it was the sunlight that dappled, sifting through leaves and gray branches.

                The ambiance, the warm shadows and silty scents of the outside world in these fertile neighborhoods calmed me and were responsible for the sense of pleasure, of contentedness I often had. Just to be there, to walk outside in the morning and feel the chilly air, the softness of its touch and how it spread over all there was, and I would in the afternoon lean against one of the trees and wonder about the world, and what it might mean to walk in the stillness within the measure of this presence, filled with the warmth and touch of what it was to have the sense of him.

              Such an understanding of a world in which this presence is all and in which the only true meaning and satisfaction and fulfillment is within the experience of God is not easy to find. It is nearly always the product of hard experience, and many never find it. In our time, perhaps most never fully understand this, even when they spend much time in church trying to glean some connection with the words and rituals there, developed over centuries and millennia. We know if we are honest that many find no relevance in church and feel somehow bereft of the fiery germination of the spirit which is excited and eager to move out upon this adventure with the one we so awkwardly name God.

                This does return us to the fundamental question. Who are we in this life, this earthly world? And most particularly, who are we in relation to this presence? And what is it that we are becoming?

Such are the questions that have scratched at me, like a persistent creature scratching at the door, wanting in. And I have spent my life trying to coax it to sit upon my spirit and help me understand what all of this is about, and who we are, and where it is we are going.

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Chapter Four

          It is another day, and it reminds me of a ritual.

            Yesterday, I was trying to figure that out. Is ritual the word I am searching for? Is that it? I am not sure, but it seems likely. I was searching for something which includes the idea that we cycle through seasons and events. Part of what seems always in the vicinity of human culture is our need for ritual. There are the seasons that trundle by in every year. And within this I am aware of them slowly moving. Or perhaps it is not them. They are not necessarily moving. It is simply my perception. We see them moving as though we are stationary and they come in this steady, predictable clockwork.

            There are calendars, and we turn the leaves, the pages of these attempts to account for time that passes. Sometimes we find some old calendar upstairs in the attic or caught and forgotten in a file. And just looking at the calendar there, a strange feeling washes over us, because in a moment of near clarity we see it more clearly. And it feels a bit odd to suddenly catch a whiff of this other time and see in a moment just a hint of what we are, trapped within our perceptions of what is.

            But we move through the year, and collectively all of us participate in this acknowledgment of the seasons, the significant parts of the year with events and holidays. And the news media dutifully put together stories which show the event as it happens in one part of the country or another. One of the big ones is New Year’s Day, when we –nearly every one of us--come together in some form of mass participation in the new year, with a steady rising toward midnight when the lighted ball will drop in Times Square and couples will kiss and there is the sense we have of something significant in all of this we can’t quite understand.

            For me, though, there is always nearby, lurking like an important shadow or truth, the imminent idea of who we are and where we are going. This is an idea we each of us are aware of, though we have not learned yet to acknowledge it or put it into words. I study the trunk of the tree that stands poised and still near me now as music swells around me from the speakers tucked discreetly into the doorframes of my vehicle, my car.  And I am parked near it, near this tree, which at the moment has leaves turned to oranges and yellows, so that yes, we know that it is autumn. And one thing it recalls is when I was much younger, settled in the classroom, one of dozens of fifth graders. I remember the smell, the scent, the aroma of these other kids, some of them unwashed and not realizing it. They smelled of stale, old sweat and skin and yet it was just part of the time, a part of the classroom experience we would accept.

            In that room, in the autumn, we would have our crayons and the mimeographed sheets of paper with purple lines. Have you smelled mimeographed sheets? So high and sweet, a little like ether but not so strong, though it would make my head feel light to take a deep breath of damp papers that were fresh from the mimeograph machine. And we would color the leaves in yellows, oranges, dark browns and speckled pigments and think of dusky evenings when the air turned cool and chill, and there were slow leaf fires that burned and released into the oncoming night the fragrance, low and sweetly smoky.

            And the little neighborhood animals sneaked around, nearly hiding, intent upon finding something nearby that they could track with some primal, heightened sense of smell in their muzzles, even in the night of what we believe is part of modern time, drawing upon things. These primal things mustered in the air and quivering in their chromosomes and DNA, hidden and yet suggestive of the invisible, powerful time that surrounds us that we seldom pause to think about or acknowledge. Just as this tree right there near, at the edge of this parking lot. There are some answers to who we are and what we have been, what we are becoming, in such subtle clues.

            And lurking nearby is this presence that is always there, stitched into the very molecules of the air we breathe. It is part of the fiber and cellular structure of that tree, even defining the ridges in its bark and the patterns, the pigments presented in the leaves and in their quiet, incredible patterns, or in the graceful tilt as each leans from its stem and trembles upon the invisible autumn breezes, inspired by a steady, nearly invisible shower of energy from the sunlight that spills into our world. It has lit each molecule in the air, crept across each follicle of hair on every living mammal, including us humans, or absorbed in cells of all creatures, of each organism, even molecules scurrying in their microscopic water world, sliding along the scales of fish there and settling in gaseous crevices somewhere down below.

            But this should remind us that there is much about the holy Bible that we still don’t notice or comprehend. This simple statement that is there, for example It is the statement that says, I am with you always. Perhaps it means more, far more than we have usually credited. When God releases these simple words into the world through the utterances of prophets and words recorded in the pages of that seminal book sitting over there on the mantel or on a shelf somewhere, perhaps these words imply much that we have largely ignored. And here I refer to the idea that God is literally spun into every fiber of every plant, creature, organism and even into every inanimate part of our world.

            Furthermore, when it is stated in Genesis--that first amazing biblical book—that God created the Universe and everything there, it is no wonder that the signature of this entity we refer to as God is stitched into every fiber of every atom, every particle, both the visible and the invisible. Everything here and beyond contains the signature of this entity. And we should understand that when God says, I am with you always, even to the end of the world, that is quite literally true.

            And it suggests that the ones among us who doubt the existence of God are in the ridiculous position of doubting his existence when in fact this entity we refer to as God is in every beat of the heart and even in each lung-full of the air we breathe. Earth, planets, all the Universe literally effervesce with the substance of this presence, so that we, the ones who inhabit this Earth with our rituals and our ignorance are in a spiritual Dark Ages nearly unprecedented in human history. Even the ones we think of as primitives in the ancient past acknowledged that there are hidden worlds we cannot see with physical eyes. And they were searching diligently for this something they knew is there.

            It is time we begin to awaken from our torpor, our terrible, long sleep, and begin again our halting trek toward understanding at long last who we are and what we were created to be. This is something we have not figured out in all our miserable time upon this Earth. Mostly we have thumbed our noses at God and existed in a predictable ritual of our own selfish insistence on what the world should be.

            But something is about to happen.

            God never allows us recalcitrant humans to sleep for long without some shock to knock us from the towers we build in our folly and stubborn insistence that we will do it all ourselves, separate from God. And yet we must learn repeatedly through our history that we simply cannot exist independently of the One who breathed into us and set us here upon this planet. Even something in this tree nearby understands, though we do not. And yet we are about to be jolted from this stupor we are in so that we can begin to gather ourselves for the trek toward becoming what it is we were created to be.

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Chapter Three

There is a common bond we all share through this presence which is God. No matter what the time or where we are, we are linked, and it transcends any of our human concerns that we fret about and believe are of such imminent importance.


          Today, after a life journey that has equipped me to be at least to some extent a scientist and a particular kind of archaeologist, I would like to settle back and sift through these sensations, these feelings, this constant sense of something else, so near and just beyond our grasp. I am not a scientist by training, but it is in the spirit of scientific curiosity that I settle in now to examine these feelings, this awareness, and track them as nearly as I can to their source. Along the way I will suggest what all of this implies for who we are and what we are becoming, unbeknownst to ourselves. Surely we are in a spiritual Dark Ages and must now consider how this has happened and how we might reconnect with the excitement once evident in this elusive, frightening area that slices into the most intimate substance of what we have been and are becoming.

            Since my youth, I have felt this stirring within me. As I stood beside my Ford Fairlane on some of those nights long ago, standing there in the driveway, I would look up at the stars and feel this quiet descend upon me as though I were being visited by something, and I knew it was this presence and I knew there was something being stirred within me, that this spirit was sitting upon me and moving within me. One of the thoughts I was beginning to have is that we are creatures not unlike those poor hosts in Aliens--that science fiction movie starring Sigourney Weaver in which people became hosts for alien creatures gestating within them.

                 In many ways we feel a terror regarding our spiritual being. It may be that some portion of human reluctance to really grapple with God and allow this spirit that is God to take root within us and grow is that we are scared. After all, God is so far beyond our ability to fathom the incredible depths and implications of this Creator that he is in a sense alien. This is especially true since we have never really understood this presence, this entity. We are like stubborn adolescents pouting and rebelling.

            Is it not true, though, that we are hosts for this spirit that is God within us? We might even say that we are toddlers, infants, in our understanding. We are in a Dark Ages of understanding. Really. We are. And there is something that frightens us badly, something we feel bump, stir, in these places we have scarcely acknowledged within us. So as I stood beside my car and let this presence spin down and within me, I lifted my face toward the heavens, felt that familiar awe and yearning toward the constellations and all the secret, unknown future they imply. And I breathed, longing for a future I felt I was being called toward, when I would possibly begin to explore and communicate in words what we—every one of us—sense at some time or another.


          But what is it like to have an intimate relationship with this presence we so awkwardly call God? There are many ways to discuss it, this feeling. And I would have to concede that it is not a frightening experience. I would like it to be somehow dramatic, the way it is usually imagined in the cinema. We sit in neat rows, all of us becoming shadows, nearly like mannequins in that our focus is transferred from ourselves to the the experience of what has crept across the screen, a watercolor wash, liquid and full of shadow and dusky light when something ominous is evoked. It is augmented by tremendous sound thrummed from hidden speakers and we experience something larger than ourselves.

           In this context we seem to understand that the concept of this presence requires something that suggests the unknown, and fear lurks nearby, breathing in that deep, regular way that reminds us of our own mortality and scares us even more because it reminds us of the frail, vulnerable organisms we are, subject to debilitating disease or subject to some violence that may maim or kill. Barring some disease, our fragile biological forms are destined to shrivel, weaken, and ultimately to disintegrate. Come what may, death is inevitable.

          Perhaps, then, our association of this presence with the ominous and the dark is more about the fears we have, and the reality of a relationship with this presence is more about calm and the certainty that--regardless of our fears--we will be okay. A relationship with this presence ultimately removes fear of death. Or at the least it provides a new perspective that helps us see the world and our place in it from a new perspective.

          My ideas regarding this presence, the living God, have clung to me for decades. Begun long ago as one of those unconscious glimmers, it is something deeply interred within me, like a tickle. It is the understanding that we must find a way to ease forward and learn to consider more of what the Bible emphasizes concerning the living reality of this presence that is with us here in every moment, in our very breathing and interaction across this incredible planet, this Earth, which he has created for us to begin our first steps upon.

          I began to sense him as a young child, and when I grew into my twenties and thirties, I felt it powerfully as a need, an awareness that there was something I was supposed to find and develop, ideas concerning who we are in relation to this entity, this presence. I could not have expressed it then. It has taken many years, nearly four decades, for me to learn how to put into words this powerful interaction with the one who has birthed us here and who is preparing to bump us toward new challenges, now that we are nearly ready. Even now I feel inadequate to the task.

          If I had my way, I would  just ease back and enjoy what must surely be the final decades of my life. I am not a young man--sixty-five years old as I write this. I can only breathe and consider that I will definitely continue to grow older, and I would just as soon ease back and let the years drift by like beautiful winds, the pastel hues of the sky, the calm of a day's end when we experience the sensation of work well done or of a time when rest is well earned.

          Sometimes, as I sit in my chair and breathe, as I feel so content to just relax and ease into this other time, I wish I could be left to enjoy another dimension this presence has allowed me to understand and to live within. I'd like to ease back and let it surround me. Trouble is that God won't allow it. I have been prepared for this and now it is irrelevant to this presence that I am sixty-five and have advancing age ahead of me. I understand that I must convey what I have experienced and begin a conversation about who we are in relation to this presence, to what we are becoming, and to what is surely directly ahead as we contemplate events of what is now the twenty-first century.

       

Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Chapter Two


            It is like a stepping sideways into this other world that is there. And this entity we have named God is there, always. He is always with us, though often we do not see.

I have for many decades had this strong sense that there is another world near our own. I am bothered by the constant sense of this other world. And I’m not sure bothered is the best word. That word implies something negative. But perhaps it is more like being pestered. And sometimes it is not a negative thing to be pestered. No, it is sometimes simply an idea, a nagging idea that, if we live with it, embrace it, might bloom into something stupendous. So yes, it does make us uneasy to be pestered by this nagging sense of something –one of those things I can’t quite put my finger on.

            I experienced another curious pull early this morning as I finally arrived in Baileyton after a long shift at Titanic Museum Attraction in Pigeon Forge. I glimpsed to my left a large image of the moon. Well, it was more than an image. It was the very thing, this satellite that has always been there in the sky. Nearly every night it is there to see. Even in cloudy skies it is there, just beyond our grasp, And last night it drew that itch, that terrible longing within me.  All of us have felt this to some degree or another, though it is simply accepted without much thought by most. I suppose the idea, the way we have of dealing with it, is to accept it as some draw toward ephemeral things we sense when we take the time and long for. But we have learned largely to ignore because the culture teaches that such things are for dreamers and children. I mean, the unspoken message is that if we do more than pause occasionally to shake our heads in secret awe and longing—if we do more than that, we have tiptoed toward the slack-jawed, perhaps the eccentric. It depends on the degree of our being drawn and the constancy of our attention. But we have our children and in them we allow what human expression of awe and imagination to manifest for a while. During their formative years, we smile and nod, knowing it is a signature of the child, a swing toward imagination and exploration that is part of growing up through stages but will be naturally erased, gradually it will diminish in adulthood.

            But I suppose I am a slack-jawed fool.

            That does not mean that I have stayed in childhood. But it seems that those of us who insist on pursuing this presence and really, genuinely reaching toward it, well. That is one of many reasons we are seen as fools, isn’t it? We refuse to accept the objective, mature understanding achieved by those who are wise enough and mature enough to grimly go forward without what is suspected to be a need for companionship –many refer to this as a crutch. And thus we who pine for this presence and live in the midst of it, searching and pondering issues of faith and struggling to measure the unseen—we are privately, quietly held at arm’s length, the way someone might hold a noxious toad or a poisonous reptile.

            I do, though, confess this, that I am one of the ones, the strange ones who insist that there is something else and it is quite near. I do believe absolutely in this theme echoed in the Holy Bible. Again and again there is this litany, this phrase uttered by God. I am with you. It is a way of saying I am right there, very near. And yes, that is what I am attempting to describe. Perhaps I am attempting to describe evidence that surrounds us that God is here, except that I prefer to say this presence is with us, right here in every moment, surrounding us in the very air and lit in some subtle way, the wash of light itself and the effervescing, primal shape of light within the atmosphere, spinning and crawling with energy and life. We are here, recipients of all of this and I am convinced, bothered, pestered by the constant tiny scratches, like a cat quietly yet insistently scratching at the lintel of the door, asking to come in.

            Of course that suggests another image put forth by the Church. Perhaps it is simply another way of suggesting this very thought, that God is near, always, and pestering us to enter. The image put before us in church, based on the words of Jesus himself. Behold, I stand at the door and knock.

            And this is true. This presence, this entity that has stalked us since before we were even here in our present form, is always there and is for some reason we do not understand intensely scrabbling at the door. When I am pestered, in the midst of effervescing sunlight or transfixed by the image of the moon, full and so elusive in the night sky, I have no doubt that is the rub, the scratches, the tapping of this presence. And it is a difficult though exciting task to accept the challenge of learning to be aware of this presence and especially to follow, to allow it to edge within, to come near in every moment of each new day in time and imprint us. And it is my experience that, sooner or later, the challenges and implications of this presence and our relationship to it will scare us.


            There is an expression—to scare the socks off someone. If a bit contemporary and informal, it is nevertheless an accurate statement of what this presence will do. And yet it leads us to explosions which trample the habitual, limited thought and perspective we humans have hammered out over centuries and millennia. And this book, this first small volume in what I expect will be a series, this book begins to explore who we are from a new perspective, and especially begins to probe who we are in relation to this entity, and where it is we are headed.

Monday, October 12, 2015

Chapter One

In the darkness of the night, it is ravenous, and we are aware. On some level we know everything.

The birds come tenderly, with their little jerking motions and turn their heads to study us. And we believe they have no clue as to who we are or what is important in the world. In the darkness, when what we refer to as light is gone and we have lit the air with our own light, with our inventions there in the moments, it is necessary to ease back and let it come, much the same as when my dad taught me to relax in the water. I remember how difficult that was, knowing with this deep terror within me that the water might drown me. I had choked on it before, felt the awful spasms my body did trying to free itself.

            There are some things in the world. So many things that are in the world near us. And we have the night that comes tenderly. It really does. There is a tenderness there. And when you allow yourself to ease into it, yes. There it is, even in the softness of the cat’s fur when it comes with that wickedly slinky movement that has the breath, the subtle movement in the air. And isn’t it true that we ignore these gentle reminders? Is gentle the word? Something casually there, nearby. Right there in the liquid glimmer, the softness of color, the deep green of the summer foliage that has crept up so quietly from the earth again, having crept as it always does, sprung with power and determination from the earth into our time. It brings more scratches, more of the barest taps upon the fragrant, sensitive bones in our bodies and upon the intricacies of nerve and connections, the synapses within the devastatingly complex intricacies of what we have named our brains, which scare us. The raw, pungent slap of despair of that cold understanding of something savage, raw, and unsettling.

            And in the impertinent whining of a gnat or mosquito as it hovers near, drawn to our sweat, what my grandmother called perspiration because she said it was nicer to say that. She thought of the word sweat as crude and awkward, not very nice.

            In the silt scattered near the woodsy areas, in the wetness and the damp that collects in them, in the woods, as night has crept down and these subtle, nearly invisible breaths of air and mist have clung as unseen shadow, we work very hard to distance ourselves from it. We would flee all of it, each curved and quiet breath of cold grass blade and the slow effervescing interchange of oxygen and gasses seeping cold and weird upon the complexity of this insurgency, this tenacity of life that grips the earth with fibrous, stringy fingers evolving through the many years into roots capable of pulling rich nutrients from the soil.

            So what is my point?

            It has something to do with who we are and what we are becoming. And it seems that we must begin to get quiet and let go of our tenacious hold on the reality we have created for ourselves. When we speak of this presence, we have to come at it here in this sense, where we learn to let go our fierce grip. I know it sounds strange sometimes. And I have fears about it. I mean, I am here even now, looking up toward the top of this one tree. And I just have the sense that in the edges, the quiet presence of these things that surround us, we have answers to so many questions. And one of the grandest is about this presence we call God.

In the beginning, when it was mostly just this life on the planet, before the humans arrived, this same world was here. And it was not the empty place we might imagine. I believe, when I sit here and lean back, remembering the wash of the sea, the thrum and rumble of the sea, I can nearly sense it. I have this hunch, this push to explore this. For if we really would embrace this presence and begin to grow, we have to backtrack. It is not that we become somehow primitives, or ignorant. It is more that we learn again what we have forgotten, which is how to be still, and allow this stillness to wash over us.

In my experience of this entity, there were seldom cymbals crashing, the way they did when my grandmother, Nana, took me to one of the high school football games when I was maybe four and I was fascinated by the flat, bronze-colored disks that would make such a reverberating noise as what must have been a high school kid whacked them together, bringing each hand in a quick, graceful collision and releasing that thrashing, splashing eruption of brassy sound that escaped to roll cross the dampness of the autumn high school Friday night, and these high school students in their limp band uniforms became symbols of the primal pull within us that causes us to assemble in the night for contests played upon a field, and then—led by these beating, thumping drums, horns, and trumpets, we cheer and urge on the violence and performances upon the field.



            And we wonder who we are, supposing that we have come far upon the road toward sophistication. And yet we must somehow remember who it is we have been, and how even now at this far-flung moment in time, surrounded by our technology of which we are excited and proud—we must backtrack and find ourselves, explore ourselves, and concede that in many ways we have not come far at all. And we must learn anew to associate with this entity, this presence which has hovered over all the earth, protectively and patiently, since before we were here in our present form, waiting and still, anticipating the explosions that will propel us out into the universe prepared for us and waiting.

Sunday, October 11, 2015

Preface

Since I was a child—a very young child—I have been aware of something that was there with me. It begins with a sense of quiet. This presence grips me, and it has the resonance of something primal.

            I remember it coming early in my life, when I was a young child, lying flat on my back, mostly naked, the expanse of my naked skin fascinating as I was aware of my arms, wrists, and supple skin as I lay there. I brought my leg up, my foot a shadow hovering just above me. Then I slowly drew it down, down as the tendons in my hips, very elastic at that age, stretched with a supple warmth and allowed me to bring my foot to within inches of my eyes, nose, and teeth. I then would nibble the callous on my big toe, not quite certain why I was doing that, just as I could never understand why I wandered in the scruffy woods at the edge of our yard and rubbed the bark of trees, nibbling little green shoots of plants. One time I sucked the green, curved stem of a yellow dandelion and was abruptly shocked by the wild bitterness of the sap that exploded its taste along my tongue.

            And amidst all of this, I felt a restless, deepening understanding of a presence which was surrounding me in every moment. When I was lying there on the wooden floor in my room in the soft, liquid shadows of early morning, I could feel something, and I wondered in one part of my mind, birds chirping in the trees just outside the open window and insects beginning to flutter against the wire screen that covered the window, and sweet, cool morning mountain air seeping in, heavy and spilling along the floor as though it, too, were alive and real. And in it all, whether it was the larvae I would find white and bloated under the flat rocks I felt compelled to prize up from the damp earth, or the wild moths with spiraled antennae poking from heads that I sometimes wickedly killed and ran over with the rubber wheels of tricycle or toy tractor, I was aware of this presence. And as a child, as I began to be aware of it, the way a person is slowly aware of something nearby, something seen unconsciously with peripheral vision, just at the edge, something we sense more than see, I became accustomed to it and was mildly curious.

             As I grew older, I began a long, slow journey which would ultimately bring me near, as though suddenly kneeling in the grass and looking up, would find myself so near. I could feel its warm breath flowing across my neck and shoulders, spilling into me and rubbing me vigorously inside, waking me up to possibilities. I was curious, and nearly always it is an experience of transcending time.

            Well, this first small volume is intended to begin a transformation that is long overdue even as it is an indictment of all, for we the impertinent ones of this era, are beyond outrageous in our relation to this entity, this presence which has stalked us since the beginning and does so even today. We are on the edge of a precipice from which there is no alternative but to jump, and this presence is preparing to push us off with the loving attention of a mother bird nudging her fledgling offspring when they are ready to fly. It is simply a necessary step, though fraught with danger and fear. We are its offspring, and the focus of a great anticipation in the universe.

I have always been plagued by this hunch, this inner knowledge that once there was more in the human experience of the world. Once upon a time, we knew more. There was more that we intuitively understood. We surfed with this presence, this entity. Once we did and now we have lost what we once most definitely had. But yes, from my earliest memories I was aware of something.

            I grew up in a world very different from the one we are in now. In that world, I was surrounded by people who were aware of this presence. Of course for me in those formative years, this focus was on the Church and Christianity. Through family, community, and even the nation, I was submerged in the Protestant church and its understanding of this entity we refer to as God.

            But in retrospect, glimpsing my life and my experience of this presence from the perspective of years, I believe my experience of this presence transcended what we allow is normal in today’s protestant experience of God. And yet I credit the Church and family and teachers with guiding me toward what eventually became a deep and abiding relationship with this presence. In the beginning, yes it was family, the Church, and teachers who guided me and spoke of this presence that, if we allowed, would transform our lives and guide us as it did so.

            But as I have travelled with this presence as guide, I sensed hidden aspects of all parts of the world, and I have been especially fascinated with the lingering suspicion, always near, that there is an entire world we simply do not see.

            The experience of this presence nearly always involves a sense of movement in time, or in what we would call time. It is as though the presence comes and lifts me and carries me along—a rangy tiger filled with quiet power. I sense that power and feel little prickles rising along my spine as it strides, its body lithe and comfortable, flowing with this impenetrable grace which itself transcends the present time.

            I realize this may seem strange, demented, and outrageous. I can only invite you to read. Let any who have the courage and minds mature, able to consider ideas even when they seem far outside the box. Read on at your peril, though, for the ideas here may shatter the delicate crystal barriers so carefully and deliberately put in place by our species, our culture, as we have attempted to wrest control ourselves, even flaunting this presence.



            And yet it is time we yield, taking a huge breath in anticipation of the breathtakingly wild fall that awaits us as we are nudged and then pushed. It is time that we begin to awaken.