Good Is Good

black trash bin on sidewalk during daytime

I’ve noticed this scenario with activist groups:

PROTESTER 1: We did it! We got them to make a change.

PROTESTER 2: Well, we never should have had to fight for this in the first place.

Or this…

PROTESTER 1: We raised $100,000!

PROTESTER 2: Yeah, but what about all the families who didn’t get any aid?

Both protesters are correct.

#2 is more righteous than #1 but her comments are not necessarily more helpful.

One thing I’ve learned about fighting a moral fight is that Good is Good. Any change from less good to more good should be celebrated.

A slightly better rule.
A small shift in sentiment.
A soft-spoken yes

A good act is always good.

A narrow-minded person becoming a little less narrow-minded is a victory.

This can be hard to see against the backdrop of extraordinary pain and suffering.

When a sliver of light comes in the window, it’s okay to reach out and put our hand in it.

It’s the warmth that keeps us going.

Saying Goodbye to Clé

Closeup photo of assorted color marble ball lot

I’ve had a knot in my stomach since I heard the news.

And then this morning, in that spiritual space between dreaming and waking, I was gifted with this:

Pulling into the driveway on Hope Hill Road. 🙂

What a wonderful place! There were always rows of cars in the driveway, even pulled up onto the grass. It was the hangout house, a place for us teens to congregate.

But this time, there were no cars in the driveway, no tire tracks in the grass. I got out of my car — I was on the passenger side for some reason — went up the short stone staircase and opened the door. (One never needed to knock on Hope Hill Road.)

“Hi, Cliff.”

The voice came from my left, from a room that doesn’t exist in that house. I know it doesn’t exist because I spent a lot of time in that house. It was my second home, sometimes my first.

“Hey, Mrs. P_____________”

She was sitting there on the cement floor, which was wet with puddles soaking stacked boxes amidst sparse furniture. It was obvious she was packing up.

In her hands, she held a jumbo tan cube eraser which had a hole in the top and holes in each of sides with straws, cut lengthwise, attached to each side.

“What’s that?” I asked.

“You made it,” she said, holding it up.

I had no idea what it was. She continued to look up at me from the floor. She had the same short white hair I’ve always known her to have. And I’d known her a long time, almost my whole life. Since kindergarten.

I was a weird kid. I had a weird mom, gushing with incredible love but lacking any type of boundaries so that her love just flowed over everything, drown some things, washed away landscapes in seconds.

“What’s it for?” I asked.

She handed me the strange contraption along with a handful of marbles. They clacked together as she passed them to me.

“You wanted to create a toy that was different every time.”

I put the curious thing on the ground and dropped a marble into the top hole. It flew out the side and rolled across the wet floor.

She was looking at me, not the marble. I could finally decipher that look; it was the look she’d given me throughout my childhood and teenage years, into college: a patient look, a proud look, like she could see something in me that I couldn’t see and she was just waiting for me to see it.

She always laughed at my weirdness, pointed out the cleverness in my metaphors, supported me in seeing the world through the cracked prism I was born with.

She seemed to always be there.

She’d come into the basement while we were playing pool and grab something off the couch, or she’d descend the porch steps with huge, dripping slices of watermelon, to briefly interrupt our volleyball game.

Clé was always there, and though we were teens who were constantly seeking to be left alone, I secretly appreciated being watched, finally comfortable with being my irrational self because I knew there were rational hands nearby.

It’s my hunch that others felt that way too. That’s why we all went there.

“Put another one in,” she said, still looking at me.

I dropped another marble in, and it slid out the side, same one as the first.

“It doesn’t work,” I said.

“You’re so unique,” she said softly.

I looked down at my invention, so ugly and clever. Around the rim of the top hole, I could see the black marks of the ballpoint pen I had used to carve it out, something I did while sitting in class.

It was definitely mine.

“Go ahead,” she said.

I carefully funneled the entire handful of marbles into the hole. They flowed in all directions, down the wilted straws, and across the hard cement floor. They rolled through the puddles, under the remaining furniture, thudded into the boxes all around us…

She laughed, or did that giggle thing in the back of her throat that she does. Her watchful, tireless eyes followed the bouncing, rolling marbles on their chaotic paths.

“Thank you,” I said, staring at the marbles with her, following their crooked lines as best I could until all of the wonderous colliding and the echoing stopped completely, and there was no movement left to share with her.

Suddenly I was older, no longer a teen.

It seemed strange to be standing there in the silence, no longer certain what my role was.

She took the lead (once again) and got back to her boxes.

“Matthew’s out back,” she said, giving my heart something familiar.

“Thanks,” I said, and the room became warm, the puddles gone, light coming in from everywhere, making the marbles sparkle and glimmer like stars fallen out of the sky.

She seemed content with what she was doing.

Okay. I can take it from here.

Better Than Best

Funny girl with bucket on head sitting in forest

We are quick to applaud those that rise to the top of their class, and, no doubt, they deserve our respect, for it takes hard work and discipline to perform at that level.

But there’s a danger.

When you attach your self-worth to comparative achievement, you’re destined for disappointment, isolation, and burnout. You will, at some point, experience imposter syndrome. And you’re likely to run a path that’s been run a thousand times before.

How much does that benefit you? How much does it benefit the world?

Perhaps we’re overlooking something.

What about that kid in the back of the room who’s staring out the window, the one who says no to their parents when they ask about baseball tryouts, the one who plays make-believe in the field across the street, the one who doesn’t have any interest in the Honor Roll, who doesn’t glob on to activities just because they’re thrown at them in a very particular order…

But, who, instead, gets into punk rock, crocheting, transit bus maps, beat poetry, trees, electrical circuits, car engines, microeconomics, US history… all on their own?

It takes great courage to save your attention for that thing you haven’t found yet.

And the gifts you give are so much greater when you know you’re where you’re supposed to be, instead of where somebody else put you.

You can walk anywhere with confident feet.

And we can cover a lot more ground.

Knowing Everything, Even The Future

summer in Iceland

I had a dream where I was back in college, with all the knowledge and memories of a middle-aged man but surrounded by people trying to discover themselves.

I saw a friend and walked alongside her, trying not to stare. We didn’t actually spend much time together in college; it was after college when we got to know each other, so, in my dream, I didn’t waste any time.

“What if I told you that in 30 years, we’re going to be best friends.”

She didn’t give me the reaction I expected.

“I’d say, ‘Gee, Cliff. That’s a little weird.”

She let me follow her to her study group anyway.

There, in a ring around me were 6 students, some I knew, some I didn’t. They were talking about their majors and lack of majors. There was a lot of anxiety in the room, many knees tucked up under chins.

I miffed that one too.

“I’m an English major. I mean, right now, I’m Undecided, but I’m gonna be an English Major eventually — English Lit, though I’ll be regretful I didn’t do it with a Creative Writing Minor. Or Psychology, even just Sociology. It seems so obvious now. Duh.”

They all stared at me like I’d grown another head.

Oops.

I slipped away while they studied and sought out a person who I knew I wouldn’t know when I was middle-aged because I would lose them before that.

It took a while, but I found them. They were at the campus center. I watched them order a slice of pizza, scanning the menu with their index finger, standing in white tennis shoes, while I, off to the side, was on the verge of tears.

He didn’t even see me.

All these people around me, working on building stories I already knew. It was painful, like when you realize a child’s game goes the same way every time.

I burst out the door nd looked for paths I’d never walked, buildings I’d never entered.

I ran up the steps of a dorm I’d never stepped foot in. The stairs were bare cement but well-lit, unlike the stairs in my dorm, which was carpeted and closed in. The sound inside was different, more echo-y.

I ran up the steps two at a time, pulling my way up the railing, until I realized something horrible, something that was inevitible.

I couldn’t take another step. I couldn’t move.

This stairwell, with its well-lit cement steps and never-endingness, was yanking me away from the life that I was supposed to live — the life that I wanted to go back to and live again — my Molly, my girls, my Oakland…

I turned around and ran back the other way, knocking into shoulders and book bags, burdened by the knowledge of what I was to become, or was supposed to become.

At the bottom of the stairs, with a hand on the door, I realized it’d be impossible to retrace my steps, and this thought terrified me.

I woke up, like a man falling out of a building.

My wife was sleeping. My dog was sleeping. I went into the bathroom to brush my teeth.

What else could I do?

The toothpaste cap was caked in toothpaste.

Some days that would draw out a frustrated sigh, but after running through the labyrinthian paths of my past, I just picked up a bit of tissue and started cleaning it off.

It was my 7-year old, no doubt. I recalled her cherubic little voice the night before giggling and yelling to me through the door: “I put the toothpaste cap on backwards!” She giggled some more.

I had been deep into a game of Wordle.

“That’s nice.”

Replaying the memory made it easier to deal with the aftermath. I sat on the edge of the tub as I always do in the morning, in my house, on my street, and worked at the toothpaste lid.

When I set it down on the sink, still a bit caked up, I noticed there on the ground was a perfectly clean cap, so I picked it up and switched it out for the gooky one. It twisted on so easily, my reward for the little thing of not getting frustrated, like winning an extra ball in pinball: not really a big deal, but monumental in the moment.

So many different universes to choose from, and all of us swerving around and smacking into death and love in our own scribbly line architected by the unenlightened hand of a child, a teen, an adult, and a middle-aged man sitting on the edge of the bathtub.

Ha. Maybe I AM enlightened.

I’d walked back over my own crooked line between the buildings that changed my life. I relived the wonder of seeing a friend’s face for the first time, experienced the pain of watching another one walk away.

I don’t know all the answers, even after an allegorical dream, but, when it comes to looking ahead, I can tell you this:

The gift is not knowing.

Cuss Words

Young boy shows cross with fingers - don't touch me

I never was one to care much about cuss words.

I use them in front of my kids.

My main concern is that they impede upon their vocabulary development.

Especially the eff-bomb. That word is a bit too versatile. You can use it 4 times in a single sentence.

But these so-called cuss words are arbitrarily defined as bad.

A decision made centuries ago by some tight-assed mo-fo’s.

I suppose I take the rapper approach to language. Sometimes so-called cussing is necessary to convey a feeling. Like punctuation, it helps make a point.

But more important than that, my language is my own, bruh. I make the rules.

And in my world, there are some very different kinds of cuss words, or cuss phrases, if you will.

These ubiquitous mouthfuls are more hurtful than any four-letter word.

Yet, you hear them all the time, from kids and adults, out loud and in message threads.

Who cares
Shut up
So what
That’s so easy (not for everyone, asshole)
Go away
No one asked you
Be quiet
Whatever
It doesn’t matter
It is what it is
What’s the big deal?

There are all kinds of variants.

These phrases kill spirits. They silence voices. They invalidate ideas.

The real crime is that they tend to fuck up both people involved. Everyone gets hurt; the only difference is that the one on the receiving end experiences sharper pain at the scene of the crime. Whereas the purveyor of that pain goes home and slowly bleeds out.

One interaction. Two casualties.

It would do us well to redefine the words we shouldn’t use.

Our survival depends on it.

For fuck’s sake.

Coworkers

supermarket cart on aisle

I sensed the clerk at the grocery store wasn’t much up for talking, so I grabbed some bags and started bagging.

Beep beep.

Bag bag.

We got into a rhythm like two strangers picking up instruments on the corner.

No words.

Beep Beep.

Bag bag.

His coworker came by, and I was given the privilege of listening to their banter, a small honor but an intentional one nonetheless, which made it quite sweet.

I kept my head down, kept bagging.

Beep beep

Bag bag.

They were sort of flirty with each other but not really. My clerk spoke first.

“So why aren’t you telling me I’m ugly today?”

“It’s too early for that. I’m tired.”

“You’re the one person who makes me laugh.”

“I promise, I’ll tell you you’re ugly later.”

Beep beep.

Bag bag.

She didn’t talk to me. She was in and out in 5 minutes, but she left a smile behind on the clerk’s face, who finally made eye contact with me.

“Alright, my dude, you’re all set.” He seemed a little better than before.

“Right on.”

I became his dude.

Thank god for co-workers.

You can get through anything, even a tough morning, when you got people in it with you.

Life is hard. Let’s stick together.

The Plight of Pain

Textured backdrop of soft crumpled textile in darkness

I am pain.

I cannot survive in the light

so I scurry into the corners, into the depths of souls,

swimming in guts

where it’s blacker than the darkest night.

And there, I molt and grow, whether I want to or not.

See, that’s the thing about me:

I’m not trying to hurt anyone,

but that’s my lot.

A strange fate: expanding in the depths until the host can’t survive,

destined to break apart my container so that the light comes in

and destroys me.

Born into a paradox. Both catalyst and relic.

A sacrifice, unnoticed.

Necessary but unwanted.

Always unwanted.

Perfect Vision

Stylish sunglasses placed on wooden table

Being laid back can affect your vision.

I learned this in my doctor’s office.

I had been having trouble with my new progressives – the snazzy moswen name for bifocals. I was getting completely dizzy and it wasn’t wearing off. I had trouble seeing clearly.

She asked me to take off my glasses and then we talked for a bit.

After a few minutes she told me she figured out my problem.

I noticed while you were talking to me that your head was tilted back. Like it is now. See how your chin is just a little raised?

Ha. It is!

That’s probably forcing you to always look out of the bottom of your glasses, where your reading lenses are, so when you’re just going along with your day, you’re not looking out of your regular lenses, you’re looking out of your reading lenses. Because your head is tilted so far back.

Huh.

I’d never thought about the way my head is situated on my neck, but, now that I know, I like the idea that it’s tilted *backwards.*

It goes with my vibe.

If you were to draw a figure with a tilted-back head and a smile, it would signify someone who is perpetually amused, a dreamer looking up to the sky, a non-threatening person taking it all in, someone wanting the sun to be on more of his face.

That’s me, I thought.

You might not be a bifocals kind of a guy, she said.

You got that right, doc.

Too laid back to see things straight. lol

That’s what I call perfect vision.

Everyday Prison Breaks

Light coming from the windows in an old building.

I love movies about prison breaks. I’m obsessed with Alcatraz, I’ve watched all the heist shows. I root out loud for the criminal masterminds, as long as they’re trapped somewhere and trying to escape.

I suppose that’s what makes me a good career counselor: I always believe there is a way out.

Nothing can outwit one’s drive toward freedom.

I stand in the corner of the fugitive, particularly right after they’ve made the decision to flee. I’m there with the clippers, the raft, and the headlamp.

Through the fence we go, into the sewer pipe, up stream, walking for miles until we cross the border and filter into the crowd, unnoticed.

Then it’s back to prison for me. More souls to free. A different way next time, maybe a hanglider off the roof, or we’ll just walk out the front door. (It’s amazing how unattended that door is.)

The thing about being a prison-break guide, and I’m sure Harriet would agree, you can find yourself in your own prison, running up and back on the same path back, from inside to outside, from confinement to freedom.

We get high on the liberation of others, a vicarious dope fiend, reaching the top of the mountain a million times and returning alone, content or zombie-like; I can’t tell which.

I know all the ways out. I see through walls. I’m not afraid of the warden.

But, still, I go back.

Unfinished

Artist drawing

I was being hard on myself for not finishing a course I’m building.

Then, today after meditating, I remembered myself in high school, in art class, and how long it took me to finish a drawing.

Mr. Cook would usually be the one to say it.

“Cliff, I think you’re just about done there, bub.”

But I’d retrace the lines a little darker, erase and redraw the contour to be a little more round.

I’d always do a few less projects than everyone else. I always ran out of time.

As Gaga would say, “I was born this way.”

Somehow, this notion that my perfectionist ways run deep within me, is reassuring.

The slow launch of my course is nothing new. It’s not about the course. Or the timing.

It’s an inevitably squiggly timeline because that’s how I do things. I take the long way. I toil. It’s who I am. It’s what makes me a great writer, an attentive husband, a dedicated coach. It’s why the sound system for our karaoke parties is so damn good.

I could go on.

I love that piece of me because it’s a piece of me. It’s been around forever.

It prevents things. But it enables them, too.

Perhaps that’s what wisdom is: being able to use the beloved pieces of ourselves in the right way at the right time.

And knowing when to put them away.

I get the sense that I just unlocked something.

Hand raised, pencil down.

Mr. Cook, I think I’m done.

(No last line needed.)