Second Chances

Some three weeks later here I sit at the end of my journey, my “quadrangle of awesomeness” at a close.  As I wrote previously, this particular story is better measured in anything other than weeks or miles.  I do not propose that the story I am telling is in fact what happened, only that in truth it did happen.  I do not pretend there is no melancholy left in me even though this story’s chapter comes to a seeming close.  And I do not promise you, the reader, that this is a story with a quote unquote happy ending.  But make no mistake, it is my story.

It began many years ago when I drowned in Seattle rainwater poured over the clink of cocktail glasses and dimmed lights.  I sat across from her obliquely, she a patchwork of shadows indecipherable making, at first, the sound of noisy static.  The hurly-burly snapped cleanly in half and with it the static cleared, as if she in her own unintentional way had hurkily jerked a radio onto the only station in that vast dead sea we call cocktail conversation; it was then that I knew I was just along for the ride.  I heard her, she growing rapidly louder until only a deafening quiet remained.  I sat in the eye of a storm and knew I had but two choices: remain here and remain deaf, or else go back into the storm to her Siren call.  I was drowned and wantonly so I drank the waters that poured over my head.  Only later did I see past her as indecipherable shadows to be as goddess Cybele in Ovid’s Metamorphoses, dousing me in rainstorms to drown and return me to the sea; I “though born in hard and rugged mountains … now live in calm and gentle waters.”  And if not as Cybele, she herself a Whitman prodigy, notes she is to be found down under our bootsoles.  And if that is so then she as sea yields to became fertile soil, vibrant and lush.  She eventually left the rain-soaked Seattle soil for the more fertile sands of Lebanon and now Dubai.  And I in pieces by and by went off to find her.  I eventually found her and heard her words.  I let go of what was what.  I let be what needed to be.  Years then passed folded between the stilled falling leaves that came and then went.  I saw my own marriage and subsequent divorce went, too, as it were.  Sans me as the world’s longest long-shot, I thought there were no more second chances left to be gambled on me.  But somewhere out of nowhere she appeared again.  First as a simple, pixelated missive on my phone on the morning after the world stopped turning.  And then she arrived, albeit briefly, in Seattle to visit all the places she left behind so many years ago.  I sat with her one evening in my cafe. I sat in the shadow of her shadow and knew I was drowning all over again.  Cybele she was not only.  She, too, is my Muse.  I sucked in the scent of her breath deep and deeply into the desiccated remains of Memory: I exploded.  Only then did I begin rolling down the map toward Dubai, at first believing I was coming for her.  But I was not.  I was coming for myself.  I came to find my Heart that sits along a boulevard cafe waiting to catch a glimpse of her in the Dubai sun, it more often that not spending its days watching the sun set over those waters where her own heart rests.  I came to find my Heart and bring it home with me.  I came to Dubai to give myself the gift of a second chance.  And I have done that.  As for the rest, as they say, is history.

Athens

I arrived in Athens Saturday evening after an uneventful journey by various trains and an airplane from Firenze.  Again, I found it surprising that there was no customs to greet me; however, I suspect that since I was arriving from Italy, another member of the European Union, that such issues were of no consideration for our flight.  Getting from the airport to the hotel was as easy as taking the metro to Monastiraki station and walking a few blocks up to my hotel.

The next morning I was up, like all good travelers, to get out and see the city.  Good for Greece but bad for me is the fact that they are in the middle of elections; consequently, all national sites were closed on Sunday.  In some ways this worked out for the best as it provided me a reason to just walk the city and see some of the sites that I may not have seen otherwise.  Some 15 kilometers later I had walked a goodly portion of the neighborhoods, parks and even national cemetery.  I ended my walk at Lycabettus Hill which overlooks all of Athens where I stopped to take in the view and enjoy some Greek coffee.

Today I again awoke early, but this time all the national sites are open to visitors.  Yeah!  But because so many people could not see them yesterday they are all visiting them today.  Boo!  Frankly, there are so few tourists that it is really quite nice since you have much of the place to yourself.  It is certainly warm enough to not require a jacket even if I do see people walking around in winter coats; I suspect this a difference between people acclimated to warmer climes and people like myself who are not.

Athens in some very ways reminds me of Napoli.  There is a lot of graffiti nearly everywhere you look; however, I did find nooks and grannies of neighborhoods that did not show any evidence of tagging.  Unlike Napoli and Italy in general, people smile while out and about; this I find a pleasant change.  In the evenings when people are out and about at cafes is when the city really comes alive.  Every cafe and every restaurant is as much outdoors as it is indoors.  At times it is hard to discern where one restaurant begins and ends given that all the tables and chairs just flow together into a long river of linens and silverware.  My only regret is not being able to see the rest of Greece.

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Dangerous Business Going Out Your Door

It’s a dangerous business, Frodo, going out of your door,” he used to say. “You step into the Road, and if you don’t keep your feet, there is no knowing where you might be swept off to.

J.R.R. Tolkien

Well, I am off in less than a week to parts unknown!  Well, I know where I am going (sort of).  I will start by visiting my eldest sister and her family in Idalou, Texas for Halloween.  From Texas I am off to Rome, Italy where I will take a slow train down to Foggia, Italy.  Once there I will spend a week visiting one of my best friends Dave and his family.  At some point I will determine how to get myself to Greece where I hope to take even more photographs, write, and enjoy whatever might unfold.  I have a ticket to take me from Athens to Dubai where I will spend the last five days soaking in some sun and sand.  It is what I call the Quadrangle of Awesomeness.

Me and my back

And after three weeks on walking and taking pictures and visiting friends and family it is planned that I return to Seattle.  I suspect I will return if for no other reason than my mother and father are visiting me for Thanksgiving.  But a part of me does not want to return, albeit I mean this more metaphorically than physically or literally.  My heart?  Will it return with me?  I suspect I will go to sit with it and do by and by wait with it for a dearest friend to stop and say hello.  And I also suspect my heart may decide to stay there in the lingering waves of that sand dune heat to wait some more.  But that is another story.

I have come to realize that deep down I am a Traveller.  I am not just a traveler of places, but a Traveler of ideas and peoples and cultures and experiences.  When I first read “Lord of the Rings” so many decades ago I instinctively understood Bilbo’s warning to his much younger nephew Frodo even if at that time I still had not been much further than to the cornfields at the edge of our manicured lawns of Turk Hill Estates.  It is dangerous not because there be monsters at edges of the world, it is dangerous because it forever goes on from one experience to the next.  A world of infinite ideas and emotions and perspectives to try to understand and to minimally honor through acknowledgement.  I do not know where I am being swept off to, but unlike Bilbo I may be a bit more prepared: I have my hat, favorite walking stick and even a bit of monies in my pocket.

Who, me?

Today I met with Paul of VeloTransit about a travel back-pack (more on that later) while at INSCAPE.  In the course of our conversations he noted the Nikon D90 hanging around my neck and asked “Are you a photographer?”  I hesitated.  Am I?  I mean, I take photographs, certainly.  And I even have some semblance of an online gallery at Ward’s Pics.  But am I a photographer?  I hemmed and hawed.  I am not even sure exactly how I replied, but it was not in a simple affirmative or affirmative of any kind.  The response I wished I had given came to me, albeit too many seconds and too late in the flow of our continuing conversation for me to say: I am a photographer dabnabbit!

Flashback to mid-March this year when Tracy and I both joined AmazonTote; she as our user experience designer and I as the technical program manager (aka, technical gofer).  Tracy is not simply a 40-hour-a-week kind of career person; she intentionally moved from a position as a full-time designer at Microsoft to full-time contractor in order to pursue her first passion: art.  It is without exaggeration she has become not only a very near and dear friend, but also an enormous inspiration in my life.  In the past few weeks we have ventured into the art of Seattle together, she in some ways taking me under her wing.  I have had the pleasure of coming to see her art at COCA and also this past weekend at Gallery 40.  And as I met her many friends and acquaintances and constituents (did you know she is the self-effacing “mayor of Pioneer Square”), she would introduce me as “Ward; he is an artist.”   Hold on!  Me?  Scratch that, I am no artist.  No!  Artist?  No?  It had a way of seeping into me, this qualification on myself: artist.  I did art, sure.  But I was not an artist, right?  What constitutes being an artist?  Certainly I thought I might be one when I was younger but I turned away from all that when I decided to become an engineer.  Since high school when had my art been shown in an exhibit?  Nor have I ever received a commission.  So how do I qualify as an artist?  I do not, right?  Certainly it is no secret I love to sketch.  I have even dabbled with oils and acrylics.  I spent a year studying sumi-e.  I attempt to write poetry and aspire to one day write children’s literature.  And I may even consider my recent adventures into photography as more than mere technical machinations.  But as Tracy introduced me as “Ward, he is an artist” I came to question how I viewed myself.

Granted, like most folks in the world it is not unreasonable for me to claim I am many things. I am an American. I am Japanese, or at least a reasonable approximation of one when I get going. I am Canadian. I am male. I am heterosexual. I am 36. I am WonderBread white. I am a son. I am a brother. I am a divorcee twice over hoping I never go for the triple crown.  I am a friend.  I did not get into Japanese manga and anime until 12 years after learning Japanese. I am now reasonably fit. I was once morbidly obese. I have traveled a bit of the world. I have held more than a few jobs.  I like that I commute to work on a bus. I am an avid coffee drinker and cafe lounger. I am that guy in cowboy boots whose only experience riding a horse is at a family dude ranch outside of Yellowstone Park.  I am a dork.  I am the guy next door. I am a lot of things to a lot of different people.  But it was not till I met Tracy that I even ever thought I was an artist.  But why not?  I am an engineer, am I not?  But isn’t it the four degrees in engineering that make an engineer?  Well, sort of.  Maybe it is a consequence of lack of self-confidence that I spent much of my life pinning my identity on external validations such as degrees.  How much of myself did I try to cram into the tin box of a career, thinking that is how to discover form, solidify definition?  How many of my hobbies I have rediscovered in the last year that I have found more rewarding than my work will ever be?  And none of those required me to get a degree to qualify me to enjoy them.  None of things that I have a deep passion require me to get board certified.  I can do and do do them whenever I please.  And as I stood listening to Tracy introduce me to her friends, it dawned on me.  Who I am is what I do, and what I do is art.  I am me who takes photographs.  I am me who sketches.  I am me who is a photographer.  I am me who is an artist.

Thank you, Tracy.

My Fear’s Many Faces

Fear evolves.  What scared me as a child no longer scares me as an adult.  Well, that is not quite true but that is for a future post.  Every day, just as we shed our body’s cells, so do we our fears, just as we do grow new cells we discover new fears.  Frankly, my own fears fascinate me.  I find a part of them compelling, intriguing things to pull out from their box and put down on the floor to examine.  I find this process comforting even, a warm welcome reminder of my own frailty, my own humanity.  It is a good and healthy thing to be warm and cozy with my fears, to become acquainted on a first-name basis.  Then again, I do not have to do as I do, do I?  I can fear my fears, can’t I?  I can merely nod my head in their general direction, but never quite make eye contact with them, as I sip another drink lounging on my couch.  We share the intimacy of secrets with our family, but fears are just guests at just one more cocktail party.  How very 1950s—and boring, no?

Self-confidence (or self-esteem if you prefer, although I have yet to discover a distinction with a difference between the two), or its lack thereof, as a form of fear, is a very interesting and personal one.  Self-esteem issues are more than just the fear that we are not good enough.  We literally fear ourselves for who we are.  It causes us to do any number of spiteful, hurtful things all in a weary string of vain attempts to hide the fact that our failures—our unhappiness, our not feeling appreciated, our sense that the world is taking advantage of us—are all rooted in the simple fact that we are not able to accept ourselves for who we are (and are not).  We build up our defenses to keep out the hoarding heathens and then forcibly project from trebuchet our fears and subconscious anger of ourselves onto others.  We live in the shadow of self-denial, refusing to admit that we are angry with ourselves.  We are angry, yes; but, we are angry with anyone who exposes the weaknesses and faults we are embarrassed by.  At later stages this fear warps us into a kind of self-nominated, self-inducing victim.  We come to blame everyone but the person responsible and with the power to do anything about our condition.  We come to blame everyone but ourselves.  And lo and behold!  We become in all dear and precious actuality our very own victimizer, our very own jailer.  And I know.  This form of fear will lay low any city, no matter its grandeur, right to the granite foundations more quickly and permanently than any other fear.  It is a ruiner of lives, a destroyer of dreams, a humbler of the “mighty”.  And I know; it was mine.

In my past I used to be afraid that neither did I nor would I amount to anything, that I was not smart enough or strong enough or wise enough or talented enough or kind enough or frankly human enough.  I used to even think my ambition drove me; it did not.  It is overly simplistic but sufficient in this context to write that it was fear that drove me: I feared that if I rested for long enough I would reveal myself for the fraud I believed I was.  Because I feared my humanness, or more specifically because I did not have the courage to love myself—all of myself—I hurt and then lost the persons I loved most.  And now?  I fear dying alone.  It is not death itself that I fear, though.  I fear that I will die a life lived without love and loved ones.  I fear I will be alone at my death, no child or wife to hold my hand, to lay down head on shared shoulders and to permit ourselves to hold onto that one last moment in the afterglow of a life well-loved well-lived.  It is natural these fears.  Certainly loneliness and fear are cousins we need to accept to our table; nevertheless, we should never allow them to drive our decisions.  But how often have my own fears motivated me in my past?  I fear the answer is: too much.  And if that last bit did not make you laugh then I fear nothing will. SEMI-COLON CLOSING-PARENTHESES.

I feared, even came to believe, I was a fundamentally broken human being.  And I emphasized the way I did for a reason; I believed (nota bene my use of past tense) my condition was an inheritance of my birth.  Irrevocable.  Irreconcilable.  Permanent.  But of course, I am human.  Nothing is irrevocable.  Nor irreconcilable.  Nothing is permanent except change itself, trite as it may be to write that.  It may be possible to live without fear.  But I do not think it is a healthy thing to attempt.  Such a success only removes us from our ourselves, from our humanity.  We need to experience loneliness.  We need to experience fear.  It is a part of our shared human condition; a requisite, payment even, for being self-aware.