What We Fail to See

I look at my keyboard and see layers of dust and dirt, compounded upon itself from a complete neglect of cleaning it the past year. It’s actually kind of disgusting.

Fingerprints.
Smudges.
Traces of cat hair.
Chip dust that worked its way in-between the homerow keys.

I see a black backdrop with white letter taunting me to write something new today. Something original.

The company lettering on the top right, a red to white transition, reminding me I paid dearly for this piece of hardware. Better hope it doesn’t break anytime soon.

These are the things that grab my attention.

But what I fail to see, and to remember, is this is the keyboard where several books have been written… scores of blog posts… emails that opened opportunities… and has been the conduit for my writing solace.

It’s not what it is, but what it has done and what it is capable of doing.

We’re so eager to look at what’s in front of us right now, we forget to see past the flaws and the supposed perfections.

Look at your hands right now.

Think of all the things your hands have done…
people they’ve held,
shoulders they’ve comforted,
textures they’ve felt

and ask, how many people really know their history?

What we fail to see is what actually makes us human. It’s the stories beyond our senses and we should do well to remember them.

Paint the Line

According to the latest research in cosmology, our universe is approximately 13.8 billion years old.

While we can argue about its origins, its expansion, its end and all matters of existence (and the existential crisis to go along with it), there’s something very practical we can envision.

A billion years is a LONG time to imagine.

To give context, a million seconds is 11 days.
A billion seconds… is 32 years.

Almost 14 billion years takes a stretch of the imagination and even then, it’s still hard to fathom.

However, let’s go on a thought experiment.

Imagine a painted line along one of the walls inside of your home. It doesn’t matter what room or what wall, we just want the image.

Now pretend that line is the timeline of the universe from its origins until now. Again, that line encompasses 13.8 billion years, so measure accordingly and figure out how long every millimeter (or inch) represents.

Next comes the fun part.

Think of everything you’re worried about—and I mean life-altering, the world is going to end type of worry.

How much of a mark will it register on that line?

Would it even show up?

You see, long after you and I are gone, that line will continue moving… continue being painted… because we are but a breath in the cosmos.

We are privileged to even look upon it.
To reflect on it.
To be a part of it.
Even for a brief moment.

Thinking upon it underscores our responsibility to share that message with others and appreciate we are all participants in the story of the universe.

Even if we played a minor role, we still played our part.

I Hate Reading

Three words that bring pain to my heart and soul, yet heard so often.

Alternate versions of this include,
“I don’t like reading.”
“I don’t read.”
“I’m not much of a reader.”

However, beneath the surface of the statement is something much deeper to evoke that response. To use the word hate on an action that has literally transformed society, pulling us into the Enlightenment Era, seems strange.

And yet, I get it.

With decreased attention spans and classrooms that prioritize standardized evaluations over discovery and joy, reading is a chore.

To make matters worse, we’ve created a hierarchy of what qualifies as “good” reading. We’ve absconded “real” books to the judgment of academics and literary critics who have cast aside the marvels of genre writers, graphic novels and children’s books (Ursula K. Le Guin had a lot to say on that matter).

We’ve also punished students by telling them what books they should be reading and forcing their compliance through… you guessed it… more testing, instead of letting them discover literature for themselves while challenging them along the way.

It’s no wonder why reading is met with such response from people. They find it frustrating, difficult and are made to feel stupid by it.

This is incredibly unfortunate with the multitude of outstanding books, authors and mediums in which to access them today.

Let’s be clear, there never was a golden era where everybody sat down and read.

But, we can usher in a new era where more people are willing to find solace in the written word. All it takes is a bit of encouragement and invitation to see what’s out there.

Living this Day Again

Just imagine for a moment, you woke up this morning and realized it was the second time you were living this day.

Forget the absurdity and hilarity of “Groundhog Day” for a moment and put yourself in a position to pretend it was real.

You get to live this day over again.

But there’s a small catch–the day still goes exactly as before and you still go through it in the same way.

Knowing you’ve done this before, what would you pay attention to this time?

How would you react to situations?

Would the way you see the world be any different?

What details did you miss from the first time around?

Time can be a great thief as we get older because we ignore the routine. The days meld together because we stop paying attention to our autopilot nature.

Knowing you get a chance to claim that time back, what would you do?

More importantly…

What details are you going to pay attention to today?

Who is Listening Today?

We’re doing a lot of talking,
a lot of shouting,
a lot of arguing.

We have a lot to say.

We have platforms to say it on.

We all have voices we’re choosing to use,
whether they’d be useful or not.

We all have an opinion.
We have an answer.
We cast judgement.

We want to be heard.

And yet…

We’re doing this without asking the obvious question:

Who is actually listening?

We would do well to just stop.
And listen.
Without response.

Connecting to the Soul

It’s the deepest voice inside of us. The one that calls out in whispers if we’re so inclined to attune ourselves to hear it.

Every day, it asks us to pay attention. To seek what is going on within ourselves and pushes us to be the truest version of who we were meant to be.

The first time we hear its faint beckoning becomes a life shattering moment.

Our initial response is fear. We know what it’s asking, but we cannot fathom actually following through on its request.

We demand more information.
More clarity.

We ask it to speak a bit louder and be a bit clearer, but when it doesn’t, we take the most logical next step and ignore it.

But the message has already infiltrated your mind, rooted itself and spread through your system so it cannot be forgotten. Since ignoring it becomes difficult, running from it becomes preferable.

We deafen ourselves to the call, run the opposite way and hope to find something better. Even if a new path is forged, filled with great things, there will always be the nagging pull of unfulfillment.

Until you are able to reconnect again with that call… that voice… that tiny whisper… you will never know what you were truly made to be. There will never be satisfaction.

However, once the acceptance comes into place and you are ready to listen, the challenge truly begins.

When you connect to who you are, working towards who you were called to be, a new force enters to stop you. Religious language calls this the devil (or demons), Steven Pressfield calls this ‘The Resistance,’ Kabbalists refer to it as Yetzer hara and many cultures and religions have other terms, but they’re all meant to describe one idea:

Being fully and truly who you are and what you are called to be is the most difficult, lifelong task a person can commit to because it will change the world.

The world doesn’t need another Howard Roark or John Galt treading on already worn down paths.

It needs great people. And great people only come when they are willing to choose the difficult path of connecting to who they were meant to be.

It needs soul… and it needs it here… and now.

Because we are capable of doing more than just holding onto them for a lifetime.

The Intention is Irrelevant

The road to hell is paved with good intentions.

It’s a quote I first read in a fortune cookie as a teenager and was confused by it. The meaning flew over my head and the person who tried explaining it to me couldn’t bring the clarity I needed.

After many well intended thoughts of my own, life experience has made this proverb perfectly clear.

Now, more than ever, we are in a world that requires action.

Wanting to do something and thinking you should do it doesn’t actually get the job done. Committing to an action, on the other hand, without consideration of how it might be received also fails to do the job.

We are communicating in a world of half-truths, misinterpretations, poor reading skills and loss of tone over the written word.

What you want to say… what you mean to say… what you hope to get across… becomes irrelevant if the receiver interprets it wrong.

Since you can’t control the receiver, the best you can do is make sure your actions, and your message, is loud and clear.

Because that’s the only thing which you will be judged by in the end.

Does the Search for Meaning End?

I remember the first time my dad saw grey hairs on my head. He wore a puzzled look on his face while giving it a close examination.

“Vito, grey hairs? Life isn’t that tough.”

Interesting for him to say that considering he immigrated to Canada and worked non-stop since he was seventeen to help provide for his family, then provide for the family he started. I know he went through a lot before and when he got here.

Looking back on it, I’m sure he was really telling me to relax. Take it easy.

Unfortunately, I’ve been caught up in a quest for meaning since my teenage years. It’s the question we all ask ourselves at one point:

What is the meaning of life?

Variations include what is the meaning of my life/the universe/all of this or substitute the word meaning for the word purpose.

I envy those for whom this is a passing question fo interest. Something that comes up on the radar screen periodically and then goes away, to be replaced by more important matters at hand.

Not me.

I’m in that category where the question drives a life-long obsession.

Although I cannot point to a particular event that caused this, my old friend and spiritual mentor made some pretty good guesses. Unfortunately, we never had the time to explore my origin story further and I’m stuck dealing with it.

This question for meaning is no doubt the primary driver over my study, fascination and practice of religion. It’s through it, I have been able to develop a language to speak about it.

In religious terms, the quest for meaning is known as the search. It’s seeking something.

While I would be happy to accept the conclusion of the many thinkers before me who pointedly arrived at an answer and proclaimed, “I got it! You can stop now.”… I can’t.

Their answers create more questions.

I can’t even say I’m farther along than when I started. My thought process has matured (thankfully), but it’s still not any clearer if I’ve arrived at any great conclusion.

It feels like inching farther along towards an infinite eternity, each step growing closer, but only made to realize the path is so much longer than you ever anticipated.

Perhaps there’s an expectation of what will be found at the end, when the reality is so much different.

Maybe my dad was right.

Or maybe we were never meant to solve that question in our lifetime.

Samuel Barber—Adagio for Strings Op. 11

Perhaps it’s my age catching up to me, but my taste for art has significantly changed. I say significantly, but it only seems that way in comparison to times past.

One could even argue this has always been a latent desire of mine, but I’m only getting honest about it now.

Normally, my go-to music for writing falls between playlists of ambient collections, coffee house artists/songs or simply a Portishead album (my first few books were written strictly listening to the Dummy album on repeat).

Now, I find myself diving into the depths of classical music. I’ve always skimmed the surface of its offerings, mainly from growing up with a sister who played piano and also from perusing movie scores for my magic shows.

However, for the focus I need to get work done, it’s the only genre that works for me now.

And every so often, I’m stopped in my tracks. There comes a composition so beautiful, so enticing, I have to stop and listen.

For instance, the title of this post points to a particularly powerful piece that had me stop and reflect on the nature of art; specifically, the nature of the artist.

When I listen to Barber’s Adagio for Strings, I ask myself, what was he thinking when he came to the blank page on this one?
What was he going through to mine such depth of emotion?
What part of him did he search that he refused to go to before?
What was he experiencing to want to deliver this to the world?

Just listening to it awakens something inside of you and while it may sound familiar to cinema goers (especially older wartime movies), it resonates.

In fact, the only way to play this piece properly, is to reach the depths of emotion Barber was experiencing himself. As artistically pretentious as it sounds, one must become the music to give it justice.

But that’s what good art does.

It makes you feel something. It brings you to a new level of awareness. It makes you get down and dig through emotions you normally hide.

Good art takes something out of the artist in order to give something to the receiver. In other words, it wakes you up and makes you alive.

It stays with you and leaves an imprint on your soul.

Consider this rendition of Roy Orbinson’s “Crying” as sung by Rebekah Del Rio. It was featured in Mulholland Drive and while that movie left you puzzled, frustrated and upset for having spent so much time with it, no one ever complains about the scene in which she sings this piece.

She took an already brilliant song and reached a new level of emotion with it.

While I am no composer and my aptitude for music is minimal (my family tried… oh did they ever try…), I have never stopped thinking about the nature of art.

Even as a magician, I was obsessed with trying to elevate the artform to something beyond mild amusement. I never reached it, but I appreciated those who tried.

Now, I have the blank page where I conduct my compositions. My orchestra is twenty six letters, each one attuning itself to my thoughts upon which they are cast.

Each piece must take something out of me. It must… or it falls flat. It’s discarded, or not written at all.

One day I might write my own Barber masterpiece, but the only thing I will be thinking is… what next?

The artist never stops.

The obsession never dies.

In the Off Moments

Always waiting for the big moments can leave you wondering why they don’t seem so big when you finally get there.

We’ve fallen victim to this trap:

The anticipation, the heightened expectation and the slight twinge of disappointment. Perhaps we were hyping it up too much in our minds, or perhaps there were a few missing elements, or something wasn’t quite right.

It’s really the mindset on the way there. We expect the big and forget about all the off moments, life’s little excerpts, on the way there. They go unnoticed, almost ignored.

It’s the casual conversation with someone, the random act of kindness, the unexpected insight for something else you’ve been wondering about—all written off in lieu of something bigger.

Yet, it’s these every day little sparks of life that build the profound and they do it so casually.

Their subtlety is what creates the momentum for us, only to realize the real profound moment isn’t something that’s going to happen, but a realization of everything that has happened.

The off moments are what to look out for and appreciate because they teach us everything.

They are the mirror to our true character.
And, at the same time, they are the training grounds for building our character.

They are the stories we remember.
They are the events we tell about.
They are the memories we keep.

So watch out for them and do your best to never brush them off.