Thursday, September 20, 2007

AGE, A COMEDY OF ERAS


When two more generations of my cells have been born and died I will have been alive as long as my father when he died, and I’m at least as much older now than any age I ever conceived of living beyond. When we’re born, we have all we need to live in the same natural world which nurtured our genetic memory, with a loving launch from our parents. Unfortunately, such memory serves little purpose in comprehending the artificial world into which we are born and held prisoner until we obey parents, teachers, police or bosses without question and begin passing on obedience to the prison without bars by our complience.

When we’re 7 and completing our first regeneration of our entire material being, we have comprehended that there are bigger people that get to do more things than we are able or allowed. We still have the freedom to fly beneath the radar of permission for anything worth risking parental ire. The apron strings begin to fray.

When we’re 14 we have grown into bodies with all the urgy, itchy extras the bigger folks have but still we’re called freshmen, four notches below the seniors, just never enough responsibility but just the right slack in expectations for radical experimentation with this genetic time bomb of harmonal rage that will partially blind us for the rest of our lives.

At 21 society expects us to become answerable for our actions both in the present and on down that career path were supposed to have laid out for inspection. Ignorance of the rules that outlaw knowledge of nature is no excuse, unless we are born wealthy or have become super-criminals, both beyond society’s ken.

At 28 there seems to have been something akin to a species split that is more apparent in the individual than society as a whole. There are those who burned their books upon graduation from high school or college, convinced they’d learned all they needed or could stand, and were out to mark up the world with their made up minds. We can leave that large group of folks back at 21 developmentally, though their cells will keep on regenerating anyway. The rest of us are a spectrum from loyal, obedient believers, having never left the class room still seeking teachers, willing to follow truths from the mouths of anyone who sounds like they know what they’re talking about, hiring “life coaches” to cross the street, at one end and indigenous tribes of hunter gatherers and successful expatriates of civilization at the other. In the bell curve between the extremes a threshold may be detected wherein the confidence of certainty in foregone life choices and reality tunnels begins feeling threatened by serious questions about daily contradiction in events.

By 35 another portion of the population has experienced the loss of their grip on the concrete conclusions required of them in the naive gullibility of their youth by the artificial authority of classrooms, parade grounds, pews and cubicles from the constant hammering of natural confrontations within and without their white knuckled clutch.

At 42 the conundrum of nature of mother earth vs nurture of mother culture has found a balance within individuals from CEOs of polluting industry to martyrs camping out in a tree to keep it from being cleared with the rest of the surrounding forest. For all the cultural influence supposedly due such maturity, the behavior is obviously going with the money for the people who have the greed to gobble it and against the planet for the “benefit” of the overwhelming number of other people who don’t have money, they just make it for other people

Seven sevens, an octave in the tune of ones life occurs at 49 … you’ve been the route, might be retiring with thirty years — ooops, I forgot that and gold watches have faded into folk lore like every other tradition bulldozed into the valley with an expediency that has me filled with pre nostalgia sadness at every thing I have the pleasure of being fool enough to love. The rate of change in the daily lives of modern civilized people is like watching a time lapse reproduction of geologic time winding tighter. It no longer requires your great-great-grand-pappy for genuine folk tales about where things didn't used to be, your ten year old has seen at least ninty-five percent of the changes the old man has experienced in a hundred years of living.

If the lessons of being emersed within civilization haven’t begun cracking the walls of the prison without bars like garlic husks on replanted cloves by this time, I have no idea what the rest of life for such certain believers must be. Plagued by diseases brought on by retentivness, I would suppose.

Here it is damned Near three sevens past an octave of 'em and I’m elbow deep in the compost of my memories and garden experiencing now and feeling green shoots preceding a lotus blossom sprout from the top of my head. Tomorrow I may wake as a butterfly. It could happen. It has before.



As my beloved wizard friend, Peter Bretz, has said many times, “You are what you don’t shit.”

13 comments:

Anonymous said...

This was enlightening. I experienced large changes at each of the 7 year marks, but didn't realize that that was the length of a cycle. So often we are propagandized to think it's "30" and "40" and "50" that are the milestones.

Anonymous said...

Very interesting. So far for me it has been every 8 years, but I have always had the tendency to be tardy...
Amber :)

Unknown said...

I welcome each year as one more semester in the life schoolroom. My body drips south but my brain compensates by becoming larger and firmer!

karoline in the morning said...

age is but a number, ask my soul how old i am and she'll reel off lifetimes like kite string on a spool...

:))
k

Yodood said...

leslie, the use of decades is characteristic of the artificiality of civilization's disregard for nature.

Amberliscious, you will live 1/7th longer than the rest of us, how nice for the world.

minx, a firmer brain? Is that supposed to be compensation for continental drip? I don't care if my body becomes a puddle on the floor, just leave my brain flexible.

karoline, speaking of kite strings, I always have a tangential scenario that runs through my mind, whenever I see your up-skirt avatar, of your being blown up, out over the land hang glider fashion, shocking prudes out of their ugly shameful embarrassment and back to the beautiful realities of nature. Does your soul recall such an enlightened adventure?

Anonymous said...

hmm....each year gravity takes another bite at my body; my brain is still mush; i did manage to file for divorce at 42; i used to think 7 was my lucky number until i read your post; and someone told me that i don't wear enough skirts (i don't think i own any, actually).

sigh.

i must be a very young soul.

red

Yodood said...

Hi Red,
I don't understand what would dissuade you from considering seven lucky in the post, I feel quite fortunate that I haven't had to be more concerned with my health as I would be if I had to live this long with only one set of cells – what a deal being beneficiary of such renewal.

The only unlucky part is being born into a culture that believes it owns the world — it may be fortunate to discover the fallacy and result of such a mistaken myth, but it has nothing to do with luck.

Anonymous said...

hmm .... or possibly it is the myth of the culture who believes the world owes it .... the age of entitlement. The haves and the have nots? completely a roll of the dice ...

considering the geological time line and humanity's brief appearance on it, I'd say mother earth is having a pretty good laugh at our expense. We seem to be hurtling at breakneck speed towards extinction of our own species ....

Earth's a lot older and a helluva lot wiser than us ... i'd put my money on nature outwitting and outlasting us any day.

Yodood said...

... i'd put my money on nature outwitting and outlasting us any day.

A couple of triggers in your statement for me:
1) if we had not ignored the relationship to nature you speak of, money or betting wouldn't have been invented

2)Nature has or needs no trick with which to outwit us, we do that to our clever selves by ignoring our own nature.

Anonymous said...

file:///Users/ksa_reyes/Pictures/1,Nature-Fighting-Back,IMG_6116.JPG

just a minor shot of mother nature's revamping of our civilized leftoevers ..... for some reason images such as these make us want to reach for pruners and hack saws .....

i think the greenbacks would make excellent compost in due time ....

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

file:///Users/ksa_reyes/Pictures/1,Nature-Fighting-Back,
IMG_6116.JPG

ummm...do over - hope that link works. and i meant to write leftovers. geesh! remind me not to leave comments after 10pm ..

red

karoline in the morning said...

lol! mr g...i cannot be sure of that experience you know, but i am sure that i would be first in line to try it out..

;))
k:)