Saturday, September 3, 2011

Boot Laces

I sometimes wonder if I ran away from home or if I was drawn to Portland Oregon to practice my art? Maybe I wanted to die and saw this city surrounded by evergreens as a last chance or an appropriate coffin? It rains here most of the year and that cabin fever becomes a good excuse to write as a refuge from the self-perpetuated insanity living too far inside your own mind can cause. I wander through the forest and can see between these trees the way that I like to read between the lines of a book, lost in intention that is only an interpretation of what I think something means.
The rich soil absorbs my step and I remember all of the places I have lived and environments I once called home. I grew up in a desert suburb of Los Angeles filled with sunshine and plastic people. The shitty thing about the sun shining all of the time is that when you are having a bad day the sun mocks you, makes a person feel like they should not feel the way that they do. I once lived on an island in Hawaii, where I was stationed as an infantryman. It was paradise on earth except that I spent most of my time preparing for war and something about preparing for war has a way of taking the magic out of paradise.
I have lived in two combat zones, and the good thing about these places was that I grew up in the desert and they reminded me of home. Life makes much more sense when a person spends the majority of their time trying to stay alive, there was a certain purpose to it and everything seemed so real. The corpses of our enemies were rotting in the sun and the smell would creep into my daydream to keep me grounded. I always loved Halloween and sometimes I would look into a set of rolled back eyes and contemplate the meaning of life. Then it would be time to have lunch and I would eat. I would tell jokes to pass the time but those corpses never laughed. I would tie up my boots and we would walk all day, until we wanted our eyes to roll back like our audience.
These trees are guard towers of judgment, they can see through me and I can only see in between them. I am lost and the dampness in the air turns into rain and I can feel my boots sinking deeper into the rich soil. The bark crackles and the trees bend over to keep me where I am. Sometimes when I walk through the forest I like to walk into the beams of sunlight that pass through the branches. Other times I want to see the forest cut down so I can climb up a hill and appreciate the sun breaking through the clouds casting its beams on thousands of tree stumps.

1 comment:

  1. A friend as dear to me as my son is in the mountains in Afghanistan. The other day he told me he had been reading Thoreau. I think you might find comfort and wisdom in Thoreau's words.

    Your writing reminds me of another Oregonian's--Ken Kesey. Must be something about the rain.

    mamaworecombatboots

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