Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Renaissance


Sometimes, I wonder....










What does it mean, this term "inspiration?"







Once upon a time, there was no need to even ask such a thing. "Inspiration" (or so I thought) was some naturally occurring phenomenon which impacted upon every life, saturating anyone, any thing curious enough, impulsive enough to stand ready to absorb the magnificence of life. Like air, like light it pulsed and flashed all around me, and I had only to keep still long enough for it to rush in, to engulf me.





There was no need to define it: it was just there.


Somehow, something inside of me remained perpetually susceptible to its mesmerizing charm.


A glimpse of color, the faint vibration of some unfamiliar sound: these were enough to evoke a roar of activity, shaking the peaceful dormancy of the mind and urging me, teasing me, tempting me to uncover more, more, and more.

Life was a tale without end, unfolding before me with the flip of each new page, never failing to provide some new adventure, present some gripping fresh mystery, draw me into some completely unforeseen conflict or situation which could not possibly be ignored but, instead, absolutely had to be acknowledged.



I thought I could never be anything less than utterly engrossed in it all.

Until recently.

Before, there was no concept of spending even a moment--much less hours, weeks, months--in any state of apathy.


Now I have no concept of any other state.


The whole thing, this change in my attitude of the world and myself in it, has proven quite devastating at times.

I have no idea what to make of it....

Some integral portion of my identity has been lost: misplaced, perhaps...but maybe, I fear, wholly irretrievable.

Gone.

Forever.




Thus, the rather terrifying question for me, lately, has been, where do I go from here?

I keep running here and there, hoping for something that will grab my attention, pique my curiosity, or even cause me to stop--just for a heartbeat--and think. Additionally, I look around me, wondering how I came to be in this foreign environment, unable to understand--or even develop some interest in understanding--when and through what series of odd twists and turns I have come to be here.


Can inspiration be created?

If lost, can it ever again be found?

How, exactly, does one tap into the inmost layer of her being in order to identify the feelings, thoughts, and reactions which imbue the world around her with depth, significance, with meaning when life itself seems to no longer have purpose or merit outside the primal instinct for basic survival.




How often I have asked myself that question--especially in this last, long month, when everything that could go wrong did go wrong, and no activity seemed worth the effort of thought I would have to expend in order to take part in it.

Even writing.

Especially writing.

Time and time again, I found myself defining the hunger to write, the desire to create as a need to tangibly relay all that is inside of the deepest self into those words, images, and impressions which, somehow, resonate powerfully within others.



When, as a child, I began creating fascinating new worlds within that vast, unexplored universe of my budding imagination, it all seemed so very effortless. Human beings naturally long to explore, to learn, and writing became my vehicle for those forays into the wonderfully terrifying unknown, just as an astronaut would aim for the moon in a rocket. There was never a concept of any other pastime, no question as to whether building my image of the world through letters, syllables, and word structures could be anything less than my one true purpose in life.







Now, I find myself wondering how and why that all changed.


Perhaps we each reach a point in life when the universe within begins to feel incredibly small.









Although life itself is ever changing, the day-to-day process of merely living it becomes almost routine. It becomes easy to look without seeing, listen without hearing, devour without tasting. Beauty exists, and to view it is pleasant; yet there really is no time, no inclination, no need to actually experience it any longer.









But why?




What happens in the course of a lifetime that changes a person to such an extent that her priorities so drastically change? At what world does the surrounding world lose its allure? When do those sweet mysteries of being lose their magic?





Of late, I have founding myself drowning in confusion, carried along this sea of my own self-doubt--characterized by a constant flow of inwardly coursing pondering, reflection, and self-recrimination--on this crippling undercurrent of inexplicable doubt and dread. Have I been sucked into another realm? A separate identity? How can one simply "fall out of" love with the one companion who has remained by her side, been her lifelong obsession? And how can anyone that fickle in the first place?

I once loved to write.

No, the very thought of writing sucks the very air from my lungs.

I am left weak, shaken, and completely disoriented.



2 comments:

  1. Hi stranger! It's 1:29 and I am waiting for my lunch.. it is terribly warm and humid but our dumb weather bureau says that we should rejoice anyway because the typhoons are coming... and we'll have rain soon:) Oh yeah, some parts of this noisy city will probably have to stand the flood too.. but, we accept it anyway -- and some are happy that the typhoon season (yah know.. with the 150 mph and above winds... is coming!!!! )

    Inspiration?... can anyone even define what that word means? What color is it? WHAT is it? What shapes it? How do we know or feel when it's really THERE? Do we know for certainty when/how/why/when inspiration leaves us? You really don't, do you?

    WE look at some majestic piece of creation (I believe in God) and we smugly declare that we're so inspired. We see the sunset and we are driven to write a poem... we smell the floral scents in some garden pathway and we get in the mood to put such a "pleasant" sensory experience in words.... or we hear a song and we suddenly want to write something about it.(Like "ode to Adam Sandler for his "I LOve Grape Jelly Song") Hey maybe I'll do that :)

    Yet, some of the great books and poems were written by men and women inside there prison cells. There were no sunsets, flowers, gardens, or even the feel of the cozy rain to help them create.

    You say you feel the world has lost its magic. I say that that THAT magic is always there particularly when you don't HAVE TO find it. If you feel or think it's gone.. let that feeling go. It will come back. Seems that the more we "hold on" to the things and feelings we think define our individual lives, the more we lose them.

    You say you've lost inspiration. Tell me then how can you give me something you say you've lost?

    Be well. Be good to yourself. The world is a village and you are my neighbor.

    Inspiration is like a naughty genie... it suddenly seems to vanish.. it teases you and you get upset. But then again, it always comes back.

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  2. PS : WHY can I write here like THIS and not "there"? Hey stranger, maybe I am beginning to care for you.

    ReplyDelete