Monday, January 03, 2011

A Trouble with Passion

It might have been a little slice of danger from the start.
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Whatever is exhilarating is also risky, kind of like riding a roller coaster with your hands above your head and your feet so flip-floppy they won’t help you brace, especially during that first long wild dip, when your hair flies behind you at lightening speed and you can barely hear your own screams because they are folded into the chill of the collective scream, all the way down, until you level out waiting for the next rapid rise and fall.
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True, there is a steel bar across your lap that holds you to the seat, makes sure gravity will not pick you up and plummet you into mid air and sudden death, but let’s face it: you want to ride that roller coaster that way—reckless and reflectively—so you hand over a piece of yourself without knowing the ropes, the same as if you choose a back country trail without provisions or a map, You do it that way and you’re taking your chances that you'll know what to do when the danger rush comes flying at you, when there’s no time to think and certainly no time to plan.
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You know it makes more sense to size things up, , take your time and venture slowly, get familiar with what's known and what isn't. You know It’s better to not be surprised when you are not prepared, to keep the rudder steady, to drop Hansel and Gretal corn kernels behind you so the path stays familiar. But then again when you know your way, you’re not surprised, and when you’re not surprised, you’re not deep in the thrill and the rush ride that’s lost to you is not exactly small.
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Isn’t that why sooner or later you’ll come to admire people who just throw their arms up and go with it and venture forth, no map, no plan, no umbrella, no kernels of anything except the wild stallion within them, why you react with amazement as they decide to let loose, finally, fully, foolishly, yes, but who’s to say the benefit will not be the lovely freedom of unleashed passion, newly minted wonder, a way of moving in a sometimes flat world, a level of deciding that transcends and transforms everything that’s come before it?
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Don’t most of us envy people like that, wish we could do it that way too, at least sometimes? Don’t you want the earth to move, the foundation to shake, the stars to explode right in front of you, to throw you off your feet and in high into the air in one explosive bolt? Really now, Don’t you?
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I knew a woman who traded in her compass and her raincoat for the thrill of the open road. She burned her house down and everything in it one October morning and she never looked back. When she ventured forth, she was anchorless, weightless, unencumbered, clueless, totally wide and open and fresh and full. . It was like her heart had split down the middle, pulsating with its own raw recklessness, spilling forth love dust everywhere, no fences, no ambivalence, no back doors, not a molecule of second guessing. She slid onto that roller coaster seat and for two years she rode up the track and down, letting an unfamiliar and totally exhilarating passion slap her face, toss her from side to side, spike her right off her seat. Vibrant images and new possibilities flew by her with lightening speed, new colors and new words and new ways previously unknown to her.
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She lived that way without a thought. She cared deeply and loved foolishly and picked up a palette knife and painted amazing faces and landscapes and emotions, mostly in the calcium reds and brilliant oranges and an occasional tempering blue. She made love at least once a day, losing and finding herself in the estacy of her muffled screams and unbridled lust, savoring the sweat that trickled onto to her breasts, formed in the smallest dewdrops, she lying there having been taken and expelled and depleted all at once.
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One roller coaster dip after another, thunderous conditions that told her she was alive, ready to be taken and expelled and depleted again, and then again. She was free, a wild stallion without fences, finding her way to the top of the terrace, looking down, small pebbles of unsure footing that caused her no trouble.
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It’s hard to know what happened next. The change was imperceptible, like that story of the sleepy frog in tepid water, who does not notice the temperature is rising until the boiling point is reached and all options of the frog’s escape are gone.
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It might have been a brilliant day in early May, or perhaps through the heavy rains in late August, but one day she was simply no longer herself. Her heart was still split open alright, a straight incision so wide and so clean she had failed to notice how much of herself had slipped away. She looked for the familiar in the distance, wanting to confirm the boundaries of her territory. Tepidly she returned to the woody path she had traveled since childhood, shocked at the erosion of its sturdy riverbanks, dismayed that the steady current had overspilled on what was once dry and fervent land. She still returned to the wild roller coaster but the lifts and spikes now exhausted her, no longer satisfied her reckless hunger, but instead blurring her vision, knocking her into a crazy dizzy confusion where the quest for passion had blown her hunger to an unsustainable level.
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She had lost herself when she thought she’d been found. .
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Did you know this could happen? Have you already learned that fences sometimes protect, not just restrict? That passion sometimes overtakes, not just exhilarates? Do you know that hearts can roam free and wild for only so long, before they need to slow down, level out, open up and wide, yes, but did you know that hearts prefer a clean cut that expands and not explosives that blast?
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Because when your heart explodes, shards blow and fall everywhere, and you might spend years picking the blown apart pieces, trying to put them back together rightly. That is what happened to this woman I knew. It took her a long time to stop looking to find and repair all those pieces. It took her a long time to learn about balance and safety and steady sails. But she did learn. Every once in a while she is back on that roller coaster, whoopy-ing her way through a wild arms in the air ride, letting the wind take her again, leaving her umbrella and compass in a back room somewhere.
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But she has a back pocket now. And in it she has the smallest folded map, tucked there just in case, that shows her the way home, just in case. There are still nights she screams in wild passion, risks it all with gleeful abandon, nights when the lights blow and the earth rumbles, but that little map in her back pocket, it quiets her, knowing it's there.
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I'm always apologetic when I post a long piece like this. I know our blogs aren't made for long pieces. So if you've made it to this point, thank you. I hope you felt thr rush of the wind on your face reading this. And if by chance you found comfort in the end, you might as well know I couldn't quite move myself past the lament of it all.
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love
kj

15 comments:

  1. kj this is wonderful. "Don’t you want the earth to move, the foundation to shake, the stars to explode right in front of you, to throw you off your feet and in high into the air in one explosive bolt? Really now, Don’t you?" Yes I do but the pragmatist inside always ensures I have a back up plan.

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  2. hells, me too! i always have a back up plan too. but once i didn't and that price of admission carried high interest. i am so happy yours is the first comment (between you and me: hahahahha!)

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  3. Oh yes,,,,YEARN for it, and often.
    And to feel the wind tangle my hair as my horse gallops.
    But that map is in my pocket too,,and most days I am thankful for it.
    And just so you know:
    I once cracked my pelvis on a roller coaster. For real.

    Here's some XO's to go in your pocket with your map.
    That's what Jack's Mama gave him for his pocket when he was scared or lonely.
    WONDERFUL, excellent writing kj!!
    I was right there with you,,,,still am.
    XO

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  4. To be brave enough to put aside the map at all seems to me an astonishing feat in itself. How sad that it isn't possible to fly forever powered by passion alone. It seems that we are limited in ways that no amount of opening our hearts will overcome.

    And yet there is comfort too in that small map speaking it's words of safety.

    To feel the wind though. Yes that is something so worth doing.

    Brilliant read KJ. Really. xx Jos

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  5. I like long posts if it is such interesting and lateral.

    It is a wonderful write-up and inspirational as well.

    Sometimes we don't have to think about how strong we are, but how strong we feel we are strong. This feeling is important, to cut off from the linear world, to throw all fears, and to experience at least once the most amazing of life's another angle.

    May be people call them insane, but aren't everyone of us is insane? And what if a person becomes insane like this? In fact in this type of insanity one can at least experience the highest of bliss in the world.

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  6. this is one beautiful piece of writing KJ. YOur passion shines through, your energy and your love. Hmm, I think I spent my years from around age 23 until maybe mid to late 50's living by passion (not necessarily romantic passion but passion for art over earning money) with no map. Or at least a part of me did. Another part of me did have that map in the back pocket (I love that image). Since part of me is wild and part very sensible and steady. But now, I must say, at 65, not really that old, but I dont feel like I can bear any more intense passion. One day at a time, slow and steady, be cool. That's more my line now.

    Hope to read more like this KJ. YOu're so expressive!!

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  7. It doesn't seem like a long post when you're into it like we all were. We're all waiting for the next installment ;)

    I actually had that metal bar on the roller coaster come up during the largest downhill. You nearly "never met me!" And I never went on another roller coaster again.

    Passion? It's always fleeting and often hiding in my quiet life. But it's nice to have it stir once in a while.

    xo
    Lo♥

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  8. oh this is so lovely...you're right, it is in all of us I reckon to want to throw our hands up and ride the wind bare-back, but is it bravery to do so? Is it foolish to do so? Somewhere inbetween I suspect...

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  9. really amazing writing kj. it was only when you mentioned the length of the post that i realized how long it was. just like lo said we never even realized it. and i think that may be one of the best uses for pockets i've heard.
    beautiful. :)

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  10. i agree...it's not too long and if someone complains - screw 'em!

    I like passion in fairly small doses - but on a continual basis. I like the map in my backpocket; my problem is sometimes I wash my jeans with the map still in the pocket and it get's hard to read. Then I have to retrace it, and redraw the bits I've lost.
    I regret some thoughtful choices, and I regret some passionate ones. I'm also so glad that there were times that I threw caution to the winds and went with the heartfelt choice. life's funny - ain't it?

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  11. I think that map in the back pocket is Age (Maturity, to be tactful). I was surprised to find it there when it slipped in.

    Oh, I understand the woman you wrote about. This is her song.....

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  12. well, well kj.. hell- it is LONG! lol

    But then again, i wouldn't have felt the exhilaration and thrill in the rides that can potentially triggers abnormal heart conditions and leading to death had i not followed you right through, yup..till the end!

    love,
    Silver

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  13. Absolutely brilliant writing, kj. I put the map aside for awhile a few years ago. It was exhilarating for a few months and terribly exhausting and I began to yearn for peace and stillness.

    I'm beginning to feel I might just want one more roller coaster ride, though. In time...

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  14. I used to have a map and a compass and a plan. Turned out, none of it was accurate. So I've had much more of the rollercoaster ride for a few years now (though partially grounded by kids who need their mother). Foolish, perhaps, but I'm not sure I'm ready to step off the ride.

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  15. This actually scared me. Does that mean passion scares me? I am passionate about what I know about, and yes, that fear of the unknown has stopped me, many times.

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