R.M., "The Moon at the Foot of My Bed" |
The Fourteen
Some days, I don’t remember how I got here, or what I’m
supposed to be doing. But today, on the eve of the lunar eclipse, it seems to
me that my prior residence was the Moon. There was a mix-up at the time of my
conception, for which I tried to press charges against the Zygote Fairy. But
she convinced the court that it was my own doing, because I was excessively
curious about sex.
I sit now with a ball in my
hands. From it strands extend in all directions across time and space. Fourteen
silver threads are attached to my body, a little above the navel. One runs to
the ball, the others link me to counterparts in other places and times: to the
man with skin the color of powdered ash who crouches over a mirror of water in
a conical hut in Africa; to the young woman of the future who is priestess and
scientist in an Order of dreamers; to the elegant flaneur who strolls with a
beautiful woman on his arm through the Paris of Victor Hugo; to the feathered shaman
living wild on Deer Mountain. Our work and our passions tug on the web that
joins us. When I remember the pattern, I can work the strands like bell-ropes,
to signal to another self. Or I may follow a thread into the mind of that other
self, in his own world.
We, the Fourteen, came here in
the same throw, aspects of a single purpose, operating outside time. My
assignment, when I remember it, is to link consciously with my counterparts and
serve the plan that unites us.
This was the product of a 10-minute timed writing exercise I led in a workshop at Mosswood Hollow, where I am leading a five-day adventure in Writing as a State of Conscious Dreaming in April.
cool piece, Robert, indeed - "when we remember it."
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