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"...without
the benefit of stories you'll find the universe collapsing.
You'll be left with the dim light of your own imagination."
The stranger
continued to speak.
How had I gotten
into this conversation? About half an hour ago I had gotten
the news that my flight was canceled for at least twelve hours.
Foul weather to go with my foul mood. Stuck in Nowheresville,
USA...far from the civilization of either coast...with no
chance of a flight until daybreak. Before me lay a night of
unrelenting boredom in an airport where the runways were bordered
by cornfields and cows. Worse yet...every available hotel
room was taken...leaving me with the delightful prospect of
attempting to sleep in a chair that had a comfort limit of
just under 15 minutes. The only sign of technology in this
flea-bitten airport was a closed-circuit television that had
finally achieved what all TV networks attempt to do: remove
all programming and have a continuously- repeating cycle of
commercials punctuated by brief snippets of pseudo-news...a
fire here, a car chase there...in other words, a poorly-filmed
action movie with no plot and no characters.
I considered
my options: continue to look through my well-worn magazine
- week-old news and wrinkled pictures of the glitterati -
or begin a search through the scraps of newsprint left behind
by travelers who had escaped before the storm. No upside to
either choice. While contemplating the possibility that this
night might set a new low for just how bad "bad"
can be, a man walked over and sat down in the row of chairs
facing me.
"Looks
like we're stuck here," he said, nodding toward the deserted
ticket counter. He started the usual small talk: who, what,
where...
"Where
am I from?" - good question. If you mean "where
did I grow up?", that place doesn't exist anymore. Freeways
and housing developments had turned my little town into a
major suburb connected to the big metropolis that is the East
Coast. As a matter of fact, tens of thousands of cars now
drive over the spot where the old tree house stood and not
one of those people has given the slightest thought to what
their driving convenience has cost my memories.
"What do
I do and why?" Technical Field Service Rep, the guy who
has to go to the factories and make the multi-million dollar
machines run. At first the lure of "see the world, meet
interesting people" hooked me, and of course the money...but
now it's four or forty years later...I can tell you from experience,
there are only three kinds of places in the world: factories,
hotel rooms and airports - all pretty much indistinguishable
except for this particular place which is undoubtedly the
most backwoods, rundown, worn-out excuse for an airport that
I've had the misfortune of passing through...and unfortunately
it doesn't look like I'll be passing through it anywhere close
to fast enough.
I figured a
good wave of cynicism and "woe is me" would allow
me to enjoying my misery by myself. Unfortunately there is
some truth in the "misery loves company" cliché.
I found that I was actually enjoying my cynical monologue...simply
because there was someone who was really listening to me.
There was an odd kind of camaraderie. I had no reason to think
that he wanted to be here any more than I did...but he wasn't
completely torqued out of joint as I was. It was as if I had
just run into an old friend. I was remembering and talking
about things I hadn't thought of in years. Strange what I
good listener can make you say. Suddenly it hit me. This wasn't
a conversation at all. My new found compadre was asking questions
with surgical precision...then listening ...intently. In fact,
it was the intensity of his listening that was drawing out
the memories. Once I realized what was going I knew this had
to be some kind of con, so I turned the "who? what? where?"
on him.
His name was
Sam Samuelson, a writer gathering source material for some
masterwork - a compilation of stories from the lives of ordinary
people. His plan was to take the lives of some garden-variety
citizens of our great nation and weave it into something interesting.
"OK," I'm thinking, "he's not a con, just a
fool." All the time he's talking, I'm smiling and nodding,
acting interested. Inside I'm thinking "Good luck, buddy.
If you can find anything worth writing about in this storm-blown
excuse for a town, more power to ya." I'm thinking, "Stories
of the People from Nowheresville", a definite #1 on the
New York Times best seller list. Suddenly he looks me square
in the eyes. It's like a punch to the solar plexus. He says,
"I know you think I'm a fool... perhaps the King of Fools...but
without the benefit of stories you'll find the universe collapsing.
You'll be left with the dim light of your own imagination."
Sam continued to speak. My ears were red and burning as I
tried to regain my composure. "We're not going anywhere
soon," he said, "let's sit for a while. I will draw
a thimble from the River of Life and tell you the stories
I find there. See that young man over there with the scruffy
beard and navy blue stocking cap? Here's a little of his story."
"Hear
Ye, Hear Ye" said the ring leader as I listened outside
of the red and yellow circus tent. "Lions, tigers, elephants
and acrobats. Tasty treats and heroic feats." Everything
I was looking for and no way to get to it. See, I was down on
my luck, a kid with no dough for a ticket to the show. I watched
enviously as the cotton-candy-laden children tugged their parents
through the main gate into the Greatest Show on Earth...just
like a gift from God (or so I thought at the time).
Then I noticed
a small crack where the tent vinyl didn't quite meet the support
pole. I knew this was my only chance...my way in. I carefully
crept on all fours to my "light at the end of the tunnel".
I jostled my head through the womb. A perfect spot to make
my "free" entry! I was right behind the center bleachers
staring at the backs of legs, heads, and cotton candy shadows.
Without hesitation, I began to wriggle the rest of my body
through the crack into the "Greatest Show on Earth".
I tugged, contorted and hauled my body through the opening
until I was completely through, prostrate, in the circus tent.
Success! Or so I thought at the time. I proceeded to dust
myself off and head for the front of the bleachers to take
my hard-earned seat in the front row. Suddenly, there came
a tap on my shoulder. I winced and turned slowly to find the
Captain of the Circus Police staring at me with the serious
eyes of justice.
"Boy, did
you think you could get in here without a ticket? Nobody gets
in without a ticket."
I stumbled and
stammered for the words to fend off his terrible gaze but
I am often not as quick-witted as I like to think I am. Surrender
became the only viable option.
"Sorry,
sir" I said. "But I'm an orphan and have no money
to buy a ticket to the Greatest Show on Earth..."
"Boy, don't you know that the tickets for this circus
are free? All you have to do is ask for one at the call-box
then come in through the Gate. The ticket's has already been
paid for."
"Well, no sir, I didn't know that. I just figured I would
have to sneak in by my own muscle and know-how." I replied.
"Son, you should know that's impossible with a crack
team of Circus Police like I got working for me. Like I said,
no one gets in here without a free ticket."
"I'm so sorry," I said with a hint of honest guilt
in my voice. "Are you gonna take me to jail now?"
"You DO stand condemned by law boy!" he barked.
"But our boss has a soft spot for children. Why don't
you go to the call box, ask for a ticket and go through the
Gate? And...don't forget to enjoy the show!"
That's exactly
what I did ...went and got a free ticket, went through the
Gate and into the Greatest Show on Earth. I've been here ever
since. I guess you could say I've become part of the show.
So, the moral to this story is....well, you can figure that
out...I'm just a kid.
Well at least
my new buddy Sam was proving to be somewhat entertaining.
I had no idea if he knew the guy in the stocking cap or not.
I suppose he could have come up with a story like that off
the top of his head then the young man looked our way and
gave Sam a nod. "You're so peeved about spending a few
hours of your precious time in a place you don't want to be
that you've chosen to waste your time rather than use it.
You have no concept of time or the possibility of anything
existing outside of time. You need to get beyond what you
think you know."
There
is a lovely scent of organic decay about the vineyards during
the time of the year known as "crush"the time of the
harvest and the pressing of the grapes into the huge oak-staved
barrels. There is great excitement among all the wineries here
in the valley. There is also a sanity and health to this work
of tilling the earth and caring for the vineyards by the rhythm
of the sun and rains and harvest-time. If Truth is the lyric
of this mortal life, this rhythm is its music. This life and
rhythm had slowly seeped into my very bones these many years
spent here tending this paradox of wild life and orderliness
that is called a vineyard. I have tilled many fields and lonely
rows here on the valley floor...years that some would call an
exile but that I have called a journey's end. But it is a journey's
"end" no longer. Neither, perhaps, is it now a beginning
but I came upon a fork in the road. It was a fork I could not
have foreseen and cannot now ever forget.
It was a cool
and bright autumn evening that it happened. The vast cobalt
blue of the northern California sky had bathed the landscape
in iridescence the afternoon the Unexpected Stranger walked
up the dusty road that bordered my land and its interminable
rows of cabernet vines. The poignant and musty smell of a
working winery was in the air as he approached me as I worked
in the field.
"Good evening
to you neighbor," I said. "Can I help you?"
"Only if I can help you," he smiled back, "I
dare say that's why I've come. But that will be your choice."
There was in
his face a remote friendliness, though I believed he was very
old. His eyes were that irregular rare blue that almost is
grey (rather like my very own, I thought) and there was about
him some loose and indefinable sense of light that contrasted
with his clothes, which were shabby...not from carelessness
but clearly from long and honorable wear. His words, though
spoken kindly enough, unsettled me.
"I'm sure
I don't know what you mean," I said.
"No," he said, "I don't suppose you could.
But all the same, this moment is for me a rare and priceless
gem. The granting of a request even. Let the thunderous roar
of the great celestial wheels and spheres grind down like
a vast mill and let a thousand suns die their sweet and glorious
death that is a resurrection of light, ere this chance is
again given to me to make this journey and attempt this deed."
He did, in fact,
look as if he had traveled a great distance. His words, quaint
and archaic, caught me off guard. But something else in his
voice intrigued me. Somehow it was familiar and alien at once,
like the face of a close friend in an old photograph.
"I have
come to help (blessed and holy word!)," he continued;
"I have traveled a distance that cannot be measured in
miles or even starlight. Though, in fact, it can be measured
by just a few steps! The help I can give is not even help
for which you look."
He said these
last words with that cavalier ease that is either the mark
of irresponsible bravado or else the sign of a very great
sanctity. I stood still, now with both hands atop my rake,
staring at this scoundrel or this saintI didn't know which.
My mind raced to find some apt reply to this nonsense. I mentally
framed a clever response but in the end I only stared at the
stranger and waited for him to resume. He glanced at the vineyard
with its long, gracefully arcing rows. The bright green vines
cresting over the rolling earth were like some huge but gentle
green wave frozen in time.
"Come, let
us sit together here under the Sycamore," he said, motioning
toward a nearby grove; "My, how small the tree looks!"
We sat down and he then pulled out a pipe and began to fill
it. "Tell me about these vines," he went on; "Do
they each have a story? Tell me their story."
My day's work
was nearly done so I saw no harm in humoring the old man with
my tales of the vineyard. We talked about the old stories
that had come along with the winery; how it survived Prohibition
by making legal sacramental wine (and some not-so-legal wine)
for the nearby churches and how it was the first to transplant
the great European vines in the rich California soil. Occasionally
he would nod assent and whisper, "Yes, I remember."
We talked on into the late afternoon until we could see the
shadow of the mountains working its passage across the valley
floor toward us. The sun finally disappeared beyond the western
ridge and the long shadows were lost in dusk's golden, enchanted
borderland. We both fell silent. Then, looking wistfully away
to the dappled rows bowed low with clusters of ruby and amethyst,
he said:
"You take
great care over these vines and they have rewarded you with
an exquisite wine. Is this your finest wine?"
"This cabernet is what we are known for," I said.
"Why do you ask?"
"Oh, you haven't planted all your vines yet." he
responded. "Your best vine has not yet reached its roots
into your land."
I was puzzled
by these questions to which, I felt somehow, he knew the answers.
He began to ask odd, eccentric questions about the vineyard.
"Do your vines ever play and run in the wind?" he
asked, casually gesturing toward the fields. I was now confronted
with this paradox in the old man. Wisdom and Experience were
etched in his weathered face but the threads of Reason seemed
to be slowly unraveling from his speech. He fixed his gaze
on a distant line of trees: "Have you ever heard your
vines laugh with delight as if playing some sudden game of
peek-a-boo?" he asked. My mouth began to dry as I shifted
uneasily on the low, stone wall. "Sometimes when the
evening breeze blows through here," he continued, "I
know you can hear the music that is the rustle of the leaves
in the vineyard. Does it sound like laughter? No, I suppose
not. It's such a shame to have so much lovely music but not
the sound of a child's laughter about the home. Look! The
Seven Sisters are rising in the East! I remember this sky
so well." Indeed, the newly risen Pleiades shone clear
and bright and was framed by the mountains at the eastern
end of the valley. It was now obvious that I needed a plan
to extricate myself from this lunacy. I suppose I felt him
to be kindly and harmless but, all the same, I began to plan
my 'escape'. I thought that if I could just get him inside,
I could call the sheriff and discover what safe harbor the
old man had wandered from.
"My wife
and I are just ready for supper," I said; "Perhaps
if I could help you find..."
The old man, almost in absent-mindedness, interrupted, "Yes,
yes. Your wife. She wants to adopt that child but you are
still saying 'maybe'. But you don't intend it at all."
Then he turned back to the field and aimlessly went on, as
if he hadn't just caused me to capsize. "Can you actually
graft a sprig on an established vine that will still produce
its own varietal? How wonderful!" he said, looking down
with childlike wonder at a young vine near the stone fence.
My heart was
in my throat and I was light-headed. Who was this man? This
tattered vagabond in the crumpled hat (I just then insanely
thought that I had always wanted a hat like that!) who had
just swaggered into the most private and guarded of my family's
long-time debates? How could he have known these things? I
was shaken and bewildered now.
"You say
you have come to help me." I said, my voice quiet with
shock; "How did you know I was agonizing over this decision?
And yet you have been asking me about vines and soil and ..."
"I have not spoken to you about any such things,"
the old man said, interrupting me again, courteously but emphatically.
"But you certainly have!" I cried. "For twenty
minutes you have spoken about..." "...the little
boy you are declining to adopt," he said, finishing my
sentence.
His face was
now lucid and searching. "Yes, I used the word 'vineyard'",
the old man continued, "but it was a greater vine and
a greater harvest of which I spoke; a greater harvest and
a greater joy. Don't you know yet who I am?" Something
just then caught his attention. "There," he said,
turning towards the low chalet; "that sweet smell of
the cabernet being crushed! Nothing on earth smells quite
like that!" That unforgettable aroma, as the coolness
of night was settling on the valley, hung sweet in the air.
The breeze was redolent of both field and valley west away
to the sea from whence the cool winds now came, honeyed with
the scent of late summer's last wildflowers. That moment,
the starlight silvering the treetops and vines, is now forever
cellared in my mind. But there was also an unnamed fear. Not
the fear of some imminent and dire sword of Damocles hanging
above me. Rather it was the fear, subterranean and ageless,
of something numinous and awful. Strictly and precisely awfulfull
of awe and a terrible wonder. But fear nonetheless, for I
had the ineluctable sense that my interior landscape was about
to be altered, forever and irrevocably.
"What should
I do?" I said, breathing a sigh of surrender.
"Children do not know genetics," he answered; "They
know love. That is all. But you fear this little stranger,
do you not?"
"Yes, and I am ashamed of that," I whispered.
The sky-vault
overhead was now a crystalline black. The whippoorwills had
nested for the night and the fire-flies had gone. The old
man was speaking but, in memory, it was as if a song was being
sung.
"If you
say 'no' to this child," he said, "then he will
in truth be always a stranger to you; always haunting the
periphery of your mind. But adopt him and he is a stranger
no longer. Fatherhood is defined by a child's love and not
the intent of an adult! Receive him and he is your son and
was so since the beginning of time." The old man, standing
up, began knocking out his pipe on his walking staff. I walked
with him toward the road. "You look toward the future,"
continued the old man softly, "and see only a nameless
intruder. I look through the radiant past and see a little
boy with a voice and a face. Which is the truer seeing? Which
is the seeing that will warm you in the twilight of your life?"
Suddenly he stopped walking and, turning round, looked back
at my home like one gazing through a great distance. "I
can see the game of 'owl-eyes' and the Eskimo kisses and the
playful wrestling on the living room floor!" he said;
"How can you see these things from where you are now?
But see them you must! These are the things you would refuse,
not merely a baby whose name is not yours!" A great chasm
of dread opened before me.
"Who are
you? Tell me plainly!" I cried.
"I have traveled these many leagues back through Time,"
said the old man, "because of the love of my little boy
named James. Haven't you guessed? Why, I am you!"
Just then the
stillness was broken by the opening of the back kitchen door.
It was my lovely wife calling me to supper. The warm lights
glowed within and the sound of her voice was soft and gentle
in the cool night air.
When Sam's voice
stopped it was like waking from a dream. Circuses, vineyards,
adoption, yes I guess there are some stories we never hear.
As I began to contemplate I heard someone approaching.
"Could
you use a lavender liasanthius?" SNAP - FLASH! I was startled
by the sudden interruption and blinding Polaroid flash. "I'm
writing a paper for Mrs. Campanelli's English class on the immediate
reaction of troubled-looking individuals after receiving a flower,"
said a bubbling young woman. "...flowers from the Well
of Healing."
"My mom's
not picking me up for a few...mind if I interview you for
my study?" I nodded in confused approval, watching carefully
as this awkward teen flounced down beside me and stared into
my eyes through violet Revos.
"Although
it's cliché, why can't some people stop and smell a
liasanthius, unless it's pushed right up their nose? I watched
a man once try for over an hour to reach the water inside
of that well because it's real deep, the well of healing.
You ever heard of the well of healing?" I shook my head.
"It's sacred water, some say," she continued.
"When he
finally reached the water, exhausted, he sat at the well's
edge, not noticing but feeling the dancing lavender liasanthius
and the soothing willows. It's not the water in the well that
everyone is after. I think it's what surrounds the well: peace,
beauty, serenity. It just takes a little exhaustion down in
that musty old well to force one to sit back against it and
chill. Then you realize why the well is sacred. Healing can
come from the peace of breathing in the wonder which surrounds
us, along our journey to the eternal garden."
"Do you
have a watch?"
"It's 9:02,"
I answered.
"Not much
of an addition to my paper but it was kind of you to listen
to my rambling," she said while tripping across me, knocking
my knees with her duct- taped Alvarez case. "I'm late.
Mom's waiting, gotta go." Gathering her scattered notes
and napkins she scampered off passed Concourse B. Among the
papers she dropped and left behind was the developing photo
of me holding the lavender liasanthius.
"What hit
me?!" I asked as Sam grinned knowingly. "When was
the last time you ran into, or should I say, were run into
by that type of joyous zeal?" Joyous zeal was definitely
not in my job description at this time. Sam turned to me,
"You are in a hurry to get somewhere but when you get
there you will be in a hurry to get somewhere else. You've
looked for happiness in wealth and travel. Have you found
it? When do you expect your life to begin?"
The
pressure was on...it seemed that from all sides, something...or
someone...was shoving him. But who knew? Who could see in this
blackness? All he knew for sure was that his senses were full...more
so than at any time in his existence. Sounds...human sounds...familiar
somehow, yet new...or at least different, but the shape of the
sound was shifting, rendering much of it indistinguishable.
They had begun
some time before. He wasn't sure how long ago. Had they always
been there? All he really knew was that those sounds--whether
peaceful or stressful, musical or lyrical--had reverberated
throughout his being. He wasn't entirely sure what each one
meant, but somehow their familiarity gave him comfort...a
sense of belonging. Their overriding timbre was rhythmic.
Two of them were especially distinct. One sharper and deeper,
the other more gentle and airy.
But that was
then. That was peace, for the most part. This day, on the
other hand, had begun with a start...something almost frightening.
The rhythms which surrounded him were faster and more urgent
from the moment he first stirred. And then came the pressure.
Sharp, harsh pressure...with a rhythm all its own. Something
deep within told him that if he survived this...this whatever-it-was...his
life would never again be the same.
A new sound broke
into his consciousness--like a muffled cry. But again, the
shape of the sound was shifting...the changes were so rapid
and continual that he couldn't trust his ears...not now, at
least. Maybe he could sort it out later ... besides, other
things...pressing things...were forcing themselves into the
spotlight of his awareness. The pressure was intensifying.
Was it possible for someone to explode? Surely his body could
not bear much more. Every nerve in his body screamed out for
relief.
Then...mercifully,
inexplicably...it all began to ease. He felt the sensation
as it traversed the length of his body. Almost instantaneously,
his entire universe had been transformed. Sounds were sharper.
louder...each touch so direct....so...so....well, words would
fail anyone at a time like this. Blinding new sensations streaked
across his horizon. Light...everywhere... bathing his entire
being. Warmth...cold...which was it? He was turning, spinning
on an unseen axis....his movement silent, though surrounded
by commotion.
Suddenly, a loud
sound rang out...then a sting...a gasp....followed by the
most beautiful, most engaging, most joyful of all human sounds:
a child's first cry.
Sam smiled.
"Thousands of children are born each day, but it's only
happened once to you. Without that beginning where would you
be? See that young lady over there, blonde, early twenties?"
I nodded. "She's been through some interesting changes.
I spoke with her a couple of weeks ago. It's not often you
find someone with such a cheerful radiance."
You
ask me why I smile so much. Well, my story is a simple one.
I was once a young girl, interested in the study of poetry,
mountains, and anything else my parents deemed useless. The
story unfolds as I skipped my junior year of college to "find
my own". Hitchhiking to Colorado that fall, I found myself
in awe. The glory that surrounded me was unattainable, beauty
beyond words. It was the first time I could tangibly see the
vastness of something beyond me. It was the first time I recognized
the frailty of my humanist thinking. My ego-centered world crumbled.
That awe which is often reserved for the expression of the artist,
instilled in me a hope beyond my own shallow giftings and weaknesses.
I knew there was more, and set out to find out what that was.
What I found was a person! The Creator, the Artist from whom
all passion, imagination, and inspiration must come in order
to bring this world to fruition - this Creator was the one worthy
of the awe so naturally invoked in my heart that Fall day. My
Friend, the source of awe became reality in my life that season,
and through my Winterprayer I've received a joy that isn't dependent
on circumstance, but the truth of the God who made me. That,
my friend, is why I smile.
I looked over
at the girl again. Hmmm, doesn't look like the religious type.
My new friend was doing some serious damage to my handy reference
stereotypes. He changed the pitch of his voice slightly and
continued:
"We
l l l l l l ... Well ... Well, W e l l l l l!" It was an
expression I'd heard Art use a number of times and each time
the hearing was like a bird trilling a morning melody with an
echo of laughter on the wind harmonizing with it. I mean most
people just don't use the word well like Art does. Press the
Playback switch for renderings of "well" and one might
hear an intimidating question of unfulfilled expectation, WELL!?
with scorching undertones and brow of eye, or perhaps as a sigh
of resignation "Oh Wellll..." Then there's the self
righteous clucking of "Well... I never!" or the slightly
British condescending "Weell" that errs up out of
the throat like a grating iron door with a turn of the heel
and closure of the heart. Next in line is that queasy, mousy
"well" that's the opening line for covering up real
or planned ignorance with body language or shifting hands, feet
and eyes. And you have to like the Gabby Hayes - Slim Pickens
"Wellll let me see now" that begins a story stretched
and its sequels. And unfortunately many of us have been on the
end of a drop dead arrow to the heart "Well" that's
a sneering defiant chip on the shoulder posturing. Art's "Welllllll!"
however is the sound of the eternal child, of astonishment drawing
up bucketful's of smiles, wonder and refreshment from the Well
of Joy. All who are near receive a taste of the Pure without
charge.
Sam nodded his
head toward a small cluster of people sitting around the unattended
snack bar. See the lady on the second chair over? What do
you think her story is?"
"Well she's pretty enough," I replied, "stylish
dresser, probably has some money."
"So, it all boils down to money and looks?" there
was a twinkle in his eye. "What remains when those things
fail? What's beneath the surface? What holds lives together?
Here's a bit of her story."
He
was my knight in shining armor, so charming and handsome, full
of goodness and love. There was never enough time in the day
as we spent countless hours talking about our hopes and fears.
Life was a dream come true, or so it seemed, as we planned our
marriage. It was only later that I learned the importance of
what words won't say.
Our wedding took
place in the summer of my twenty-first year. My knight was
twenty-five. It was before the Lord and our families that
we committed ourselves to each other for eternity. Those early
days were such fun; playing house, traveling, but most of
all just being together. Life seemed like a dream as we moved
through our daily routines.
Of course, life
isn't perfect and those idyllic, fantastical days became more
realistic as time went by. The years together brought us children,
who gave us great joy, but also demanded considerable time
and energy. The monetary responsibility of caring for our
family conspired to rob us of the easy freedom in the earlier,
carefree times. Each day took its toll on the fantasy, yet
we never hesitated to affirm our love for each other. In fact,
it was during the many sacrifices of time and self throughout
the years of our marriage that our love deepened. Our day-to-day
actions were the embodiment of love...what words won't say.
This love was
never more clear to me than during the period four years ago,
when I learned that my body had betrayed me. I had been diagnosed
with cancer and was feeling overwhelmed by the situation.
It was in the midst of my darkest hour, that this man, with
whom I had chosen to share my life, showered upon me something
more beautiful than his words could ever say. His love was
as tangible as the sun, shining down upon me and warming me
to the core. It lifted me up and carried me on to happier
times.
Throughout life
we are often told that those closest to us love us. Yet the
words are only words until we are able to experience the embodiment
of them in actions. The ultimate benefit of this painful chapter
in my life was the gift of deeply unshakable knowledge that
I am truly loved.
We have now been
married for twenty-four years. Although he may not be a real
knight in shining armor, he is my knight, my husband, the
love of my life.
Sam finished
and nodded toward the snack bar again, "More than meets
the eye?"
Feeling more
than a little uncomfortable with thoughts of love and devotion
I smiled and changed the subject.
"So where
are you from?"
"Where I'm from isn't as important as where I'm headed,"
he replied. "Once this project is complete I'll be heading
West."
Montana
is easily the most pristine and beautiful of all the lower 48.
Its vast, open topography is home to a great many wild animals,
from the mundane to the magnificent, and very few pesky humans.
These is a stillness there, an absence of the racket and rumble
of progress, that feeds the soul and impresses you with what
a small and meager part of it all you really are. It is an acquired
taste and not particularly palatable at times.
The air in Montana
is like very clear and cold water. It has a liquid quality
and yet feels weightless, lacking mass. It doesn't have substance
and taste to it, like the air in these parts. It is called
"Big Sky Country" with good reason. Even in the
mountainous areas, where there is not the endless open vista
of the plains, the sky just seems to go much higher up than
it does here. Makes being here feel like being indoors. And
when you rest your eyes on the great and glorious plains of
the eastern part of the state, it pulls your very breath into
its reaches and you find yourself resting at the horizon of
the silver, gold and shimmering blue. The mountains are purple
and always have snow at their peaks. It is not a tame country.
You can get to
Montana from here but it is a long and difficult journey,
and there are some suggestions from those who have made the
trip that you would do well to heed.
They are as follows:
Pack very little
- A good book, something to eat that is nourishing, water...it's
a hard journey, and nothing else that you could bring would
do more than hinder your way.
Go alone - It
will take all your fortitude and concentration to make it
there and each has to find his own way. There will be others
along the road to give you company and encouragement, but
none that can truly share your path.
Look up - The
closer you get, the more stars you will be able to see at
night. There aren't really more stars in Montana, it's just
that you can see them so much better without the glow of all
that is made by man dimming your vision. You must fix your
sights on something outside yourself because your inner sense
of direction cannot, I repeat cannot, get you there. Use the
stars; find the constellations that you have known since you
were a small child, lying on your back, with your sense of
wonder still intact.
Don't be distracted
- There are some nice places to stop, some great cities, and
a bevy of natural wonders that will turn your head, but if
you stop, you may never hear the siren song of Montana calling
you again. That would be the greatest of tragedies.
Whistle and sing
- It scares the bears away.
Have a safe trip
and look me up when you get there. I'll be lying on my back
looking at the stars.
I
looked at the big airport clock and saw that it was a minute
after three. Where had I heard that most people die between
3:00 and 3:30 in the morning? Cheery thought. I began to fade
into a knowing sleep. My eyes closed. In my mind I could see
the airport lobby slowly growing dim. The few sounds being made
by the sleeping, snoring travelers were magnified in the silence.
They too began to fade. Asleep or awake, I became dreadfully
aware that I was alone, painfully, woefully alone. The black
silence enclosed me in a nameless foreboding. I had been cut
off from light, from humanity, from nature and, if possible
from...
I had become
a disembodied spirit floating in black, timeless space, unable
to speak, knowing any noise I might make would never be heard.
Mind pausing, racing, crawling. Time - inconsequential. Forever
and now were the same. Ultimate torture: alone, disconnected,
hovering, untouchable, knowing but unknown. Centuries passed,
civilizations rose and fell. Valor and cowardice battled among
the living, but I was no longer on the field. No victory,
no loss - nothing but the ceaseless burning/ranting of Self.
How long? How
long? To my right a radiance of light, the first glow of a
sunrise over the ocean. My body returned, sounds, smells,
light, blur, blur, blur, focus. Sam gently shaking my shoulder.
"Not sleeping well, eh?" Speechless, recovering,
I stared. "You know," he continued, "the beauty
of these stories... these people... each one is a treasure
within himself but none is a treasure by himself. Without
relationship there is no meaning, no value. Disconnected,
they are no more than a pound of gold on the bottom of the
ocean. Life is about finding, doing, being." I looked
at the clock. It was 3:31.
Outside
a small town in a Midwestern state, by a river that flows north
to a great lake, stood a towering white farmhouse. It was perched
on a hill overlooking a narrow winding country road, and was
graced with a spacious front porch that provided a splendid
view of the rural surroundings. Over the threshold of the sturdy
front door with beveled glass and fancy etchings, through the
parlor and up the solid oak stairway, led the way to the crown
jewel of this majestic farmhouse - the attic. Once upstairs,
the path led down a hardwood hallway with a tall ceiling, then
into the steamy closet of a sun-soaked bedroom. Now at the foot
of the stairs, a steep and treacherous climb (for one step was
missing) gave entry into this grand room. It occupied the entire
third floor of the farmhouse and had a window at each end overlooking
the expansive countryside.
The attic was
filled with the treasures of past generations: magazines and
newspapers from the early part of the century neatly stacked
in a corner; hand-made toys from childhood days long past;
boxes of letters longing for someone to read them afresh;
old weathered trunks full of novels, hymnals, bibles, schoolbooks,
obsolete encyclopedias, and manuals with homeopathic remedies;
military uniforms decorated with ribbons and medals announcing
the accomplishments of a family war-hero; and an old pine
box stuffed with retired shoes from many walks of life.
The old pine
box sat in front of the south window of the attic, which gave
a wonderful panoramic view of the cornfields and river below.
In its glory days, the old pine box sat at the foot of a fine
walnut bed with decorative carvings and lacy coverings in
the master bedroom, protecting beautiful quilts Great- Grandma
had crafted and collected. But now, in the autumn of its life,
it became the retirement home for worn-out old shoes. It housed
many different styles of shoes because the attic was the final
resting place for the unclaimed possessions of any family
relation who passed away.
It was home for
wing tips and clodhoppers, play shoes and dress pumps, slippers
and sandals, work boots and leisure loafers. Some of the shoes,
at one time, were very expensive and lived in closets of luxury,
like those of a rich uncle and his wife who had a successful
medical practice in a big city to the north. Other shoes were
very ordinary, like the boots Great-Grandpa wore when he worked
the farm. But regardless of their origin or status in former
days, they were all equally crammed into the old pine box
in a very disorganized fashion.
One sunny afternoon,
a car from the big city to the south made its way up the long,
rocky driveway and parked behind the house near the big barn.
Out of the car sprang two young girls, Big Sister and Little
Sister. They loved to visit the old farmhouse with Mom and
Dad. There was so much to see and do. They could chase stray
cats in the barn, climb in the hayloft, pick wild raspberries,
follow butterflies flitting through wildflower fields, but
their favorite adventure of all was to explore the attic on
the third floor of the farmhouse. The two sisters loved to
visit the attic because they always found a little something
to take home with them. Previous trips had rewarded them with
little antique rocking chairs (just the right size for little
girls); old books that Grandpa read when he was a little boy;
old bottles and jars made from a beautiful blue glass; a jewelry
box that Great-Grandma brought with her from the Old Country;
and porcelain dolls waiting to be dusted off and given a new
home.
The two sisters'
little hearts raced with excitement at the thought of what
they might find in the attic this time. Mom and Dad seemed
to take forever inspecting the farmhouse for Grandpa to make
sure that robbers or vandals had not broken into the house
and stolen or damaged anything. The house remained vacant
for long periods of time and was an easy target for mischief.
Grandpa hoped to return to the house that he grew up in when
he retired with Grandma, but that would not happen for a few
more years. So the sisters could count on visiting the old
farmhouse regularly for a monthly inspection. Finally Mom
and Dad were ready to explore the attic with their two overly
enthusiastic little girls.
Once in the attic
and after a stern warning not to go near the stairs (for the
railing was flimsy that enclosed the stair pit), the girls
were off on their adventure. The old pine box, basking in
the rays of that summer afternoon, seemed to beckon the attention
of the two sisters. While Mom and Dad were looking for valuables
to retrieve for safe storage at their house back in the city,
the sisters began playing with the shoes in the old pine box.
They first tried to match each shoe with its mate. The sisters
made quite a game of it. Each took a turn matching shoes to
make a pair. They lined the shoes up along the wall until
they emptied all the shoes out of the box. In the process
of matching shoes, they made an interesting discovery. Each
shoe had a mate except one. The shoe without a mate, though,
didn't seem lonely, incomplete, or forgotten at all...but
had a certain mysterious dignity about it...as though it had
something to say.
They tried on
each pair of shoes and pretended to be dancers, farmers, darlings,
and soldiers. Then they began to take a closer look at the
shoe without a mate. It was a rugged shoe that offered tremendous
support for a foot. On the inside, there was something written,
taped to the inner sole of the shoe. Big Sister peered a little
closer and tried to read the faded message. The only word
that appeared legible to her was the word..."beautiful"?.
She had a chuckle with Little Sister about this because compared
to the other dressy pumps and silky slippers of the old pine
box, this was not a beautiful shoe at all, but more of a common,
everyday shoe. Then Little Sister (who had only been reading
for a year) grabbed the shoe from Big Sister and tried to
decode the message. She looked ever so intently at the words
in the shoe until she proudly exclaimed to Big Sister that
she could see the word "feet". Big Sister was a
bit surprised and found it very difficult to accept that she
could miss such an easy word. But there it was in the inner
sole of this mysterious shoe, "Beautiful Feet".
Now the sisters
were beginning to understand that this humble shoe was trying
to tell them that it was not the shoe itself but the feet
of someone who wore the shoe that was "beautiful".
This message seemed a bit odd...even baffling to the sisters.
Who in the family history had beautiful feet? Maybe a distant
relative was an actress or a princess who had feet that were
delicate and very becoming. But why then would she wear such
an ordinary shoe? She certainly would wear something more
elegant, like perhaps a glass slipper. Big Sister, not to
be out done by her younger sibling, took another shot at deciphering
the words inside this "talking shoe". After much
straining and squinting, the only other word she could vaguely
make out was the word "pea". This was terribly disappointing
because Big Sister could clearly see that there were many
more words in the shoe.
Having exhausted
their limited resources, it was now time to consult a higher
authority. So they scurried over to Mom to see if she could
help them solve this puzzle. Mom was busy searching through
boxes, browsing in dusty diaries, and making a stack of old
books to take back home. As she took the shoe in her hand,
she smiled with great delight. She knew exactly whose shoe
it was. It belonged to a Great Aunt who was a missionary for
many years in an Oriental country. This country knew little
about Jesus so she traveled great distances by train, boat,
and rickshaw to tell them the good news of God's love. She
never married but devoted her life to teaching orphaned children
about how much Jesus loved each one of them. She even adopted
one of the abandoned children and named her Grace and taught
this little girl about her Father in heaven.
On previous expeditions
to the farmhouse attic, Mom had collected pictures, diaries,
books, and spectacles that were some of the few cherished
possessions of this beloved Great Aunt. She brought them home
with her for safekeeping and learned a great deal about the
life of this precious and inspiring relative. She even had
a picture on the buffet in their dining room in which this
Great Aunt was wearing the very shoe that she now had in her
hand. On this visit to the attic, Mom had found another box
that contained more of this missionary relative's spiritual
library, including her Bible. As she took a closer look at
the message inside the shoe, she noticed some of the letters
were combined together with numbers. They indicated a Bible
verse. She took her Great Aunt's Bible and opened it to Romans
10:15, and read it to her curious daughters, "And how
shall they preach, except they be sent? as it is written,
How beautiful are the feet of them that preach the gospel
of peace, and bring glad tidings of good things!"
The two sisters
were thrilled to finally figure out the meaning of the message
and hear their Mom tell stories about her Great Aunt. Mom
explained that this verse must have been very encouraging
for her great Aunt when she was so far away from home teaching
others about Jesus. As the summer afternoon turned to dusk,
it was time for the family to head south for home. The two
sisters had unending questions for Mom about her Great Aunt.
Their imaginations went wild trying to figure out what happened
to her other shoe. Maybe an oriental prince found it at a
royal ball and spent his whole life searching for her so that
they could get married and live happily ever after. Maybe
the Prince of Peace has it in heaven with Him. Maybe she gave
it to her adopted daughter as a gift. Maybe it sits in a closet
somewhere waiting to share its eternal message. As the car
was heading down the rocky driveway, winding its way to the
river road, fireflies were sparkling their luminescent lights,
beautifying the darkness.
Once Sam finished
I closed my eyes and began to dream.
In
my dream, I was standing on a platform built high, very high
up a pole, and before me was the impossibly fine line of the
high wire - I, who am so fearful of heights, I, who am so fearful
of so many things. I dared not look below, for fear I would
be gripped by the insane pull of empty space, and just leap
to get it over with, to relieve the tension of the fight. What
was down there? What is down there, I asked to no one in particular,
but I was answered by the Stranger, and as I peered into the
hazy distance, I saw him standing at the other end of the wire,
on a platform just like mine. He was smiling at me and his face
and body were at ease, relaxed and collected. I was astonished
to see him there, who always seemed to end up somewhere in my
dreams. I almost thought that he winked at me, a kind of "Gotcha
again!" wink. For a moment I sagged in relief, but then
tensed up again. I knew it was only my constant vigilance that
would save me from the fall to my doom.
"What is
down there?" he replied. "What is down there are
two alternatives of equal peril. To the one side, is where
you will fall if you try to depend on your strength, wits
and expertise alone."
I snorted. "My expertise! I have no expertise. I hate
heights. I never would do this of my own will. I just became
conscious somehow, and here I was."
"My point exactly," he replied. He smiled again,
a brilliant, tender, warm and winsome smile and for a split
second I felt I could have danced down that wire and into
his arms with the freedom and grace of a bird in flight.
"And the other?" I prompted, tensing once more and
feeling the breeze swaying the platform gently.
"The other," he continued, "is where you will
fall if you cease to fight and just give up and let yourself
go. It will feel effortless, but the ground will be just as
hard when you crash into it."
I felt a jolt
of pure rage course through me. The King of Paradox. And I
with my very life at stake.
"So,"
I practically snarled at him, "If I try, I'm doomed,
and if I don't try, I'm doomed. Is that it?"
He nodded, a
slow bow of assent.
"You could say that...but there is a third choice."
I waited. His eyes lifted and burned into me.
"You can step out, onto the wire, one very small step
at a time, and look straight into my eyes. If you do not look
down, if your eyes never falter, you will make your way slowly,
but safely, to me on the other side."
"And if I look away?" My voice was pleading.
"You will fall", he replied, and my heart sank,
knowing my limits so well. "But I will catch you."
Slowly, timidly,
I take a small, tentative step out onto the wire. His face
is very beautiful. I feel like I am dancing.
I awoke
and slowly stretched. Sam waited for the sleep to clear from
my eyes and began to speak. "See that couple over there?
Ordinary or extraordinary?" They looked ordinary enough
to me - middle aged, a little weathered, nothing special.
Sam read my mind. "I spoke to their daughter recently",
he said, "here's what she told me..."
When
they first met, they shared their lives and their dreams with
each other. She would become a celebrated drama director. He
would become a compassionate physician. She could see herself
receiving awards and accolades from an adoring public (and from
those thankful to be counted among her friends). His vision
was to care for the sick and disabled, with no concern for making
money (loved and respected by all). They both had good reason
to believe that their dreams could come true. So, they married.
And they worked on their dreams together, and they climbed higher
and higher on their career ladders. Until I came along. Then
the ladder rungs shattered - as did their dreams, one by one,
and they began a free fall into the unknown. You see, my name
is Nancy, and I was born with Down's Syndrome. I would like
to tell you the story of my parents, Jeff and Linda, and how
they found the dreams they thought were gone forever, by Descending
to the Dream.
Before I was
born, my Mom and Dad were living in a rent-controlled apartment
in New York City. She had completed her drama degree and was
already directing original productions, off Broadway. Her
work got great reviews and she had just been offered a job,
that would start in December, as an assistant director for
"Cats" (which hadn't opened on Broadway yet). My
Dad had been accepted by several medical schools, but he wanted
to wait until she had the job for sure. Dad was painting houses
that summer and Mom was pregnant with me.
I was born on
the first day of Fall.
Fall - that was
appropriate. After they found out that I was a Down's baby
there were fallen faces, falling emotions, and things really
began to fall apart.
It wasn't just
that I had Down's Syndrome. It was all the problems that went
with it. I had trouble breathing. I couldn't swallow, and
my heart was a mess. I had to have surgery right away on my
heart and they got that fixed. The next surgery was to open
up my esophagus so that I could swallow food. That went fine
too, and after a couple of months in the hospital, I finally
got to go home. But the other thing that went home with me
was a huge bill - and they didn't have any medical insurance.
That's because
when my Mom got pregnant, Dad was already out of college and
was working for himself, so that didn't have any medical insurance.
My Mom had never had it in the jobs she worked. So, their
standard of living took a big fall too. The one good thing
was the rent-controlled apartment, because the rent didn't
go up hardly at all in the 15 years that we lived there.
The dream had
become a nightmare. My parents were so shocked and depressed
for the first months that they almost got a divorce. Life
seemed so bleak, and the future didn't look any better. They
had been told that even when I was an adult I would have to
live with them, unless I went to a group home and learned
to do menial jobs. Well, as you'll see, it didn't work out
that way. Read on to find out why.
Now, the debt
that came home with me was more than 4 years of medical school
would have cost, but it wasn't going to be as easy to repay,
because there would not be an M.D. after his name. My Dad
never was able to afford to go to medical school. My Mom did
get the job with "Cats", and she stayed with it
for a year because my Dad decided to stay home and take care
of me. I got sick a lot, with lung problems, and my Mom and
Dad both took good care of me. Eventually, the bills were
greater than her income, so she stayed home with me, and Dad
took a job with a New Jersey drug company, since his degree
was in chemical engineering.
During the year
my Dad had stayed home with me he spent a lot of time researching
what could be done about my condition. He read everything
he could find. But when he started working for the drug company,
that had a bigger effect on our lives than anyone could imagine.
First of all,
some coworkers invited him to a lunchtime Bible study. Dad
was still angry at God for what had happened to our family,
and he wanted the answer to the big question - Why does God
allow suffering? He never did get the answer, but he did find
the solution - Jesus Christ. One day he realized that Jesus
Christ chose to endure more suffering than any of us will
ever know. If there had been another way, Jesus surely would
have chosen that path. But for some reason suffering was necessary,
and that reason was God's love for all people, even us. Jeff
and Linda became one with Jesus that day when I was 16 months
old. Then, on another day 4 years later, I gave my life to
Jesus too.
As a result of
the love and hope they had found in the Lord, my Mom started
a performing arts group for Down's kids at our church. She
did wonderful plays with dance and music that allowed us to
communicate our love and joy to our family, friends and each
other. By the time I was 5 years old she was teaching performing
arts to special education teachers. She then set up a special
foundation to support performing arts for Down's kids all
over the country.
The second most
important thing that happened as a result of my Dad's job
was that he had access to more research. While he was staying
at home with me Dad had already found studies about the benefit
of nutritional supplements for Down's. They had been done
by Dr. Henry Turkel in the 1930's. He had started me on those
supplements at 6 months. I began to grow faster and got sick
less often. He also noticed that I began to get physically
and mentally stronger with each passing month. Then about
a year after he started work at the drug company, he found
out about a drug called "Piracetam" that was being
used in Europe to help improve brain function. It had been
developed in the 1960's and was thought to improve the connection
between the two halves of the brain. We went to France when
I was 18 months old and I was started on this medication.
We found a pediatrician in the United States who was willing
to monitor my condition and blood levels on a regular basis.
As a result, she and my Dad were able to perfect the nutritional
formula and started a company that began to provide it for
sale to parents with Down's children. As of today they have
helped over ten thousand Down's kids and their families.
As a result of
the nutritional supplements and the Piracetam, I made rapid
progress in learning and was able to develop at age appropriate
level for children two years younger than me. By the time
I was 10, I could read and write at a third grade level and
do basic math. My body still looked sort of like a typical
Down's kid, but not as rounded and my weight was almost normal.
I kept on improving and was mainstreamed into regular classes
when I was 12.
When I was 16,
a friend of my Mom's, named Sylvia, who had known her from
her "Cats" days, came to visit us. Sylvia had become
very famous, since receiving several Tony awards and winning
an Oscar. They hadn't really talked after my Mom left the
show, but Sylvia had seen an article on the foundation and
found out where we were living. Sylvia and my Mom stayed up
all night talking. Sylvia talked about how empty her life
was and how she had been a cocaine addict and tried to kill
herself. She'd been through 3 marriages and was living with
someone now. She was amazed by all the good things my parents
had accomplished and wanted to be a part of it too.
Sylvia started
by providing the foundation with a great endowment. Then,
after I graduated from high school, she got me connections
for acting jobs on television. Soon, I was working regularly
and living on my own. My Mom and I were hired as consultants
for writers and producers who wanted to include characters
and actors with disabilities in their shows.
We all got together
last year for Thanksgiving and started talking about what
we were thankful for. As we did, we discussed what had happened
over the last 20 years. It was then that my parents told me
about how tough the early years had been. You see, I had never
heard about the dreams they had started out with. As they
shared the whole story with me, we suddenly realized that
God had actually fulfilled their dreams - not the selfish
parts - but the loving and giving parts.
My Mom had helped
direct a real life drama - our life and she is also helping
to direct thousands of other real-life dramas and artistic
performances.
My Dad has helped
improve the lives of those with Down's Syndrome and through
his research he continues to help those with disabilities.
We remembered
what Jesus said in John, chapter 12, verses 24-25:
"I tell
you the truth, unless a kernel of wheat falls to the ground
and dies, it remains only a single seed. But if it dies, it
produces many seeds. The man who loves his life will lose
it..."
Now, we read
the verses again, with the word "dream" substituted
for "seed".
"I tell
you the truth, unless a dream falls to the ground and dies,
it remains only a single dream. But if it dies, it produces
many dreams. The man who loves his life will lose it..."
Their dream had
fallen and died, and by descending, their dream had grown
into a much bigger dream. Which reproduced thousands of other
dreams for thousands of other people.
Praise be to
God, the Great Giver of Dreams.
We sat in silence.
My mind and heart were full...no...overwhelmed, the ordinary
was truly extraordinary, my narrow view of life was shattered.
I attempted to think, to meditate, to considered, but the
long night and exhaustion conspired against me. It must only
have been a few minutes before I had fallen into a deep sleep.
When I awoke
Sam was gone. There was a note on his chair, "See you
in Montana. - S." I stretched and walked toward the row
of large windows. The morning sun was burning through the
fog. I passed a young girl seated by her grandmother. She
was reading a poem that she had scribbled on a piece of paper:
Hair
streaked with strand of gray, she sits, my gran
The wrinkles on her care worn face, I love everyone
A smile, a memory of a time gone by
Remembering, Remembering
A life's journey complete, mine to begin.
I continued
down the corridor. "... mine to begin ... mine to begin
... mine to begin..."
All stories
©1998 by the respective authors. Narrative story by
John D. Morgan.
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