The Dharma Bum

I used to keep a journal. Meditate three hours a day. Climb on my days off. I'm the same guy. Just older and more in debt.

Wednesday, February 15, 2006

brainstorm

write as fast as you can and say what you will it just keeps filling your mind. there are no voids unfortunately and that's what vipassana meditation tries to do, to empty your mind, to find a natural state wherein we can hear just who we are. most people don't want to hear just who we are because it's too painful, too full of unwelcome misgivings and difficulties and pain. but, life brings good things in plain wrappings, bad things happen to us and good things develop. you never know what is in store for you but if you look at life as an opportunity to do something meaningful with what could be just one shot at life, then don't waste a minute.

my dogs are sweet, they look to me for everything. my two boys are four and eight and i yelled at them last night because they were screwing around while i was on the phone. for some reason it just set me off and they both cried. but about thirty minutes later we were cranking the stereo and i was filming them dance around the living room to Led Zeppelin. funny that i would hit shift to capitalize the name of the band but not the word "i" well it goes to show you that maybe somehow i've managed to step outside of the power of ego.

well ego or not i put on this shirt today over a red sox manny ramirez t-shrt and it has a faint odor of a shirt that was worn once and then left to hang in the closet for a long time, then when you wear it the faint odor is right under your nose. no one would even smell, i even asked my wife to see if she knew what i was talking about. well, just took the thing off and tossed it over a chair. so i'm sporting red and the number 24 with a pair of jeans.

get a goddamn life and make something of it. i keep thinking the people that i loved most in life that are gone now would give me the lottery numbers in a dream but they never seem to come. so, i'm thinking that one of my big lessons in this lifetime is to be self reliant, not to get an easy ride off winning the lottery...and besides i can never remember to buy a ticket anyway, and when i do it's quick pick! so, if i just let go of the ties i have to trying to make it through each month then maybe things will come easier.

that said, i got an email from a client today who says the video is possibly on hold or put on the shelf. can you believe it? that would make three videos in the last quarter that went away...three videos that could've been my income for about six months and they are gone gone gone.

holy shit time to start sending vibes to my dad and brother up there in heaven to see if they can impart their infinite wisdom of the netherworld to pop into my head the winning megabucks numbers for tonight...even if i have to share the couple million, a hundred 'grr' would do the trick.

well, that's my brainstorm for now. better get to the work that hasn't been shelved yet.

when you log into blogger and see the 'blogs updated at...' section it's impossible to see this one pop up there...people must have to update every minute to get a listing. tell you what though i just saw a blog listed as 'undress britney' and that opened my eyes. dharma bum what? fuck that dude undress britney trumps your sorry assed excuse for a blog. i'll have to do a search to see if that blog has any content worth seeing.

oh last thing, i couldn't sit with having that incredibly descriptive post about my brother's last day be sitting up there on top. so, thus this post. my wife says not to think too hard about the last moments of his last day. it's not who he was.

he was so much more, so very much more than that last impulsive act.

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

Suicide Is Painful - Happy Fucking Valentine's Day

I once lived.

Then I was sure I'd never feel happiness again.

Now, I'm beginning to live again.

Daily I've struggled about that last day of yours, my soul mate brother. You woke up for the very last time just this very morning, one year ago. You poured a cup of coffee. The mug was in your kitchen sink.

Somehow, you couldn't see through to the trail of sadness and despair that would pour down the bathtub drain along with your blood. You were righthanded, but used your left to work with a knife. You kicked lefty. Shot a hockey puck lefty. You drew your illustrations righty. The utility knife they found between your knees on Saint Valentine's Day was in your left hand.

You stopped by the office, received a FedEx package, left an incoming FAX on the machine, full of papers finalizing the sale of your land in Montana. Your land that looked lazily over to the Yellowstone River where you fly-fished so many times.

You didn't bump into Mitch or Meg. Things must have felt so quiet. Too quiet. Maybe bumping into someone would've changed things. You didn't return emails. Sometime late in the morning or early afternoon, you came home. Then, before you went for a run, you folded your faded jeans neatly in half, lengthwise, and placed them carefully on the bed. The belt was still on them.

Your apartment was immaculate, as things always were for you. A perfectionist: neat and particular about styles, the way you arranged things. You hated messy cars, messy kitchens, messy hair. Oh, if only you had had kids...

That evening, you pulled some boneless-skinless chicken breasts from the 'fridge, a head of broccoli, then started cutting them up for a stir-fry. You'd just finished a glass of wine. I wonder if it brought you any satisfaction.

Your stereo had three CD's in it: "Ballads" by the John Coltrane Quartet; "Monkey Jungle" by Duke Ellington; and Thelonious Monk with John Coltrane. The cops and the bio-hazard clean-up crew never told us if the stereo was on when they found you. Kris says she wishes she could've cleaned the tub. That's the way she could love you, clean you up and take care of you. We could've held you like a baby. Let you cry all night.

Maybe the image of the sharp knife cutting through the flesh of the chicken was too powerful. So, you left everything right there on the kitchen counter, lit a bunch of candles and placed them around the bathroom, and on the edge of the tub. Then, you stepped into the tub and sat, facing the drain. Did you sit and think it over for a few minutes? No one can ever really know those precious moments before you took your last breath.

I once had a mental image of how someone cuts themselves with the intention of dying. After I heard the police report on your death I threw that image away. Your's was no cry for help, no little slit on the wrists. You went for the pulsing vein on the inside of your elbow, the genetic characteristic we both shared. Low body fat, veins on the arms. Remember way back, lifting weights at the gym and seeing the veins pop out? I can almost picture you driving down the road not long before this happened, feeling the veins on your arm and thinking "If I do it, that's the place to cut."

That's what you did.

You cut. Over and over as hard as you could. To the bone.

The day you died you took me along with you.

As if out of your very own mouth I can hear it now:

"Happy Fucking Valentine's Day".

I've broken down every interaction, read your every email, every credit card bill, poured through your apartment, now all packed up neatly in boxes at our house. Sometimes when I need to feel you I open up a note you sent me, or an email, or look up at the photo of you and me before we climbed Carrigain that winter.

It drove Mom nuts, but, you didn't have to leave a note: because I know. Soul mates know...

Something has to give if you live a lifetime stuffing anger inside. Somewhere, sometime, somehow a boiling pot of water under pressure will blow. You couldn't be angry at Adrienne after she cheated on you. You couldn't be mad at Dad for what happened when he was still drinking (33 years ago). Mom made us feel like anger was poison. That robbed us all of our ability to deal anger, process our emotions.

Then, Dad died only three months before you decided to go. Losing him was like untying a shoelace. Things sort of fell apart, lost their meaning. No glue. Mom began to lean on you because you were alone, too. I'm sure that's what happened.

I miss my best friend.

You were beautiful. Everything about you: the way you drew, your laughter, you made a room light up, girls swooned for you, whatever was yours was mine, you guided me, inspired me, challenged me...pissed me off a few times.

You helped define me. Now, losing you forces me to redefine myself all on my own.

In some sick and metaphysical way, I thank you for this absolutely painful and dramatic, ugly challenge that you've left in my lap.

I won't let you down.


++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

FOR MY BROTHER:

Can you hear me?
Are you out there somewhere?
Can you lay a flower on the snow
And let me know you hear?

Are you out there
Somewhere in the wind?

In the dark of night
When I lay awake
I wonder if you're there
Looking over me

I can hear you say my name
Like it was yesterday
Then I feel the fear
Wash over my soul

Fear is dark and cold
You can't pull the covers up far enough
Laying awake before the dawn
No one to answer your call

I see you in the light
I know you're out there
I feel you every day
And hope you'll look over us

When I do see you again someday
Have a six-pack ready
Let's take a drive down to Old Saybrook
Pick up some cigarettes on the way
I'll walk in the house naked
And tell Adrienne that it's time for bed

Don't worry
I've heard you calling
I do know you're out there:
I heard the owl hooting at us near the porch this summer

Wednesday, February 01, 2006

High and Wild

This high and wild stuff is what attracted me to northern New England in the first place. It was 1987 or so, I was a distracted television reporter hating all the egomaniacal ramifications of climbing the small-city journalist ladder, when my brother took me ice climbing near North Conway, New Hampshire. I was hooked from the moment my crampons hit the ice. It was a moment of epiphany that would catalyze a change in my career path, how I spent my spare time, and ultimately, where I lived.


I moved to North Conway in '91, then moved away a couple years later to take a job editing for a small television program. In the short time living here I met my wife, and also consolidated my plans to meld adventure and exploration into my career path as a documentary producer. I also practiced long and hard at being adequate on steep ice and rock.

Twelve years later, married with two boys, my wife and I made the decision to move back up here in '04. It's a good place to raise kids. Gym class for my boys is skiing at Attitash every Thursday. They shut the school down and every kid skis, like it or not. That is a cool way to grow up.

My regret is that kids, a career, a mortgage and so on, keep me from my appointed rounds on the ice. It's been awhile, to say the least. But, every day I drive by pinnacles of ice hanging from the cliffs and can sense the thrill of air under my feet.

Last Friday I asked a couple of friends to join me up in Lake Willoughby, Vermont for some climbing and filming. We chose the New England Ice Grade 5+ route called Promenade. Hanging icicles, rock moves, vertical ice and a mossy finish over wet slab are some of the features we expected to encounter. It was a spectacular day.

All I know from the experience is that I need to get out more. Follow your dreams, live where you want to live, investigate your inner workings...and CLIMB!