I have a powerful and peculiar brain compared to a
bug’s brain. But it is just like yours – except that mine is unique. And so is
yours. Even a bug is not precisely like every other bug in its thinking and
actions - such as they are.
Where is the sense in this? you are asking. But it
was only my brain talking earlier, and there seemed to have been something
sensical at the time.
But here is one puzzle. What is worth doing? How
is it not an entirely frivolous use of my time to write this apparent nonsense
– and yet somehow it means something to me.
I could grow beans and rice with my time, carrots,
bok choy, black-seeded Simpson lettuce. Or like my brother-in-law, I could buy
and sell, sort and schlep, trundle stuff from storage lockers to Ebay to flea
markets and still barely make enough to provide for his family the way he would
like to do.
All the while I don’t get paid at all for writing
poetry and other nonsense.
Consider all that unbelievable amount of wasted
time before we were born, and then there will be all that unbearably long time
after we are gone, and then in between there’s all of this. And yet we burn
this brief candle as if everything matters – doing what? And why?
Why not just sit on a bench with a cardboard sign
that reads, ‘will eat food for spare change – will sleep in the scrub woods on
the edge of town for nothing.’
Some of those brains are damaged and skewed – in
ways that are different from yours and mine.
And yet the time will pass no matter what we do.
What is the measure of worthiness when all will be
consumed?
I never had the chance to meet the man who made
the most exquisite baskets out of pine needles and bits of grasses and stuff
that I saw at a friend’s house one evening. Put a match to them and all that
time and effort put into those baskets would be ash in an instant. And who
needs pine needle baskets, anyway? And anyway, the man, too, is gone.
We are filled from birth with drive and abilities,
with desires and energy. And so each of us does what each of us finds to do,
the apparent difference between necessity and frivolous so glaring, yet so
insignificant.
I admire the tall, brown leather boots my wife
bought – the animal cared for and killed for its hide, the skin worked, tanned,
shaped and stitched. Then on the outside of each boot someone placed three
brass-colored metal buckles, somewhat for function, mostly for style. There’s
also an intricately fashioned zipper running down the inside, a long-toothed
slide from the top to the arch so that the boot can slide over the heel, the
foot coming to rest on a crafted bed. Hands were involved and hands made the
machines that were also used.
These boots are no accident, but who really needs
boots such as these? The bugs and the beasts of the fields? Consider the lily;
they toil not, neither do they spin.
Why not just lay ourselves down and die?
And why do some write on corrugated scraps of
cardboard and I – I write my printed and pretty-sounding words. And men and
women, and sometimes little children, toil for their survival and for my
survival while a contrived and accidental system provides easy opportunities
for some and harsh gain – even loss – for others.
Oh Jesus! You left so many questions with only the
hints of answers.
You said that God said, ‘You fool, this night your
soul shall be required of you, then whose shall these things be, which you have
prepared?’
But who or what made us this way in the first
place?
And what else are we supposed to do with our time?
Without food we will not eat. Without art, we’d rather starve.
What nonsense would you compare to my nonsense? Or
flip it. What makes sense for you to do?
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