Welcome
to my blog, my invitation to you to tag along for the ride as I share a few
moments of enlightenment that have come my way over the years. I remember an
esteemed teacher many years ago recounting the counsel of the old wisdom when
he told me our intention in this world ought to aim at reducing suffering and
the causes of suffering and to increase happiness and the causes of happiness. I’ve
not forgotten this counsel and it gives me pause as I remember another teacher,
a writer from Chile known to the world as Pablo Neruda. He was a poet, diplomat
and politician who once read from his writings to an audience of 100,000 people
in a football stadium. His legal name, before he changed it, was Neftali
Ricardo Reyes Basoalto. He wrote under the name Pablo Neruda, in honor of his
hero, the Czech poet Jan Neruda. In one of my favorite poems he invites us to
seek wisdom where we find it:
Pay Attention Traveler
Because of this, traveler, pay attention to
all that passes before you;
there are people that look like trees
and rivers that flow as they are intended.
Pay attention, traveler,
and revel in what you do not see but could
if you paid attention to the wind telling
you stories of lovers and play -
and of wonders as yet undreamed.
Because of this, traveler, pay attention to
the leaves of gold flickering in the water which are not leaves and there is no water.
Because of this, traveler, pay attention.
-Pablo
Neruda
December
3, 2013
When
I published my novel The Gift, a dream came true (you can get it in paperbook and ebook from Amazon). A dream
hatched quite some time ago in my high school sophomore study hall. I wanted to
write a story. Sitting at my high school desk I began writing, and completed
about half a page. I didn’t know yet that in order to write worth a whit, I had
to listen to stories, tell stories, read stories. And have a life. That was all
in the future.
After
my wife and I moved to Northern New Mexico in the mid-1990s I became interested
in the colonization of the southwest which began in 1599 when a caravan of
adventurers, treasure seekers, monks, lawbreakers, crypto Jews, and women with
their finest clothing and household items set out from Mexico City to establish
the Kingdom of New Mexico. I wrote their story from the viewpoint of one of the
monks, Brother Antonio, who went native in the colony, was excommunicated and then
condemned to be burned to death by the Inquisition. But that wasn’t the story I
wanted to tell at that time. So I set it aside.
I
took up writing again about ten years later, this time setting the characters
in the 1960s with Father Jonas Fielding as the protagonist. Jonas’ story soon
evolved so that I was able to combine the 1960s story of Jonas’ experience with
the church with the 1599 story of Brother Antonio. The thread weaving the two
stories into one is the affiliation between Brother Antonio and Father Jonas, set
in the empire of the Church. Both Antonio and Jonas are priests of the imperial
church but neither one wore the yolk of empire comfortably. Their stories are
fiction existing only in the mind of the author. Fiction is like that. It’s created,
a story, a point of view, what one person sees. But wait. What would we see if we looked with
new eyes?
Pablo
Neruda cautions us to “pay attention.... revel in what we do not see but could
if we paid attention.” What would we see if we paid attention? Can we? Dare we?
Is this the beginning of a new journey and a new story? I think so. I invite you to come with me down this road that
surely will lead to new stories and dreams.
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