Before you read: a caveat. First of all, I thank you for your patience as the last few posts have been less like creative nonfiction and more like journal entries. There are probably several reasons for this, among them undoubtedly a bit of my own self-absorption, but I simply want to express gratitude for your sticking with me. These posts have meant a lot to me and it also means a lot that you have taken the time to read them. That being said, I do hope in the future to return to the development of a medium whereby you and I can better relate and co-experience both the terrible and transcendent beauties of life.
Now, although what follows may seem somewhat pessimistic and at times ridiculously skeptical, especially in terms of spirituality, I believe it represents a big step for me. I have been struggling lately with emotions in general and trying to move into a vulnerable sphere in which I will more readily allow myself to feel and accept them. In this regard, I have lately experienced a feeling of wanting to belong somewhere and I believe that such was the case in the writing of what follows; among other things, I think I was feeling a particular brand of homesickness. And although this may not be an incredibly pleasant emotion, the fact that I was allowing myself to feel it at all and also the fact that I was trying to find a way to vent that feeling (in this case, largely in terms of spirituality) is, I think, fantastic. What is more, I think it interesting that I so intimately tie together in my mind these three themes: spirituality, belonging, and being loved. I hope you enjoy what follows. Admittedly, it is a bit long-winded and scatter-brained, but, well, if you know anything about me it's that I think too much and talk too much. Thus, this is probably a pretty good representation of me and my mind; sorry about that.
(Written on 6.17.12)
What do you want to do, Daniel? You're sitting here typing to yourself because you don't even want to use the energy it would take to speak! You are a dangus -- you sit here in nothingness and occasional self-pity wanting nothing and doing nothing. Actually wanting nothing isn't completely accurate: you are hungry. Your stomach aches slightly and you're so incredibly annoyed at the inconceivably slow internet speed that you may convince yourself, within a few hours, to go somewhere that has better wifi.
But just look at you, sitting there playing games and watching movies and thinking about nothing. All you think about is how you don't want to type using notepad because you have to press "enter" before the words hit the edge of the page (like a typewriter) so you don't have to be subject to the OCD annoyance of the page scrolling sideways. Seriously!? That is what you think about? Yes, that is what you think about.
You look for someone to blame for the internet speed, but you don't want to talk to anyone about it, especially because the effort it would take to figure out what's going on would be too much for too little benefit. Of course, that is looking at things very short-term since you will be here for another month or so. But even still, the effort to get up off your ass and go to True Coffee would be much less, at least in your mind, than the effort to talk to whoever is sucking up all the bandwidth or to talk in broken English to the owners of the apartment to try and get them to do something. Though I'm not implying that they wouldn't do anything. In fact, I think they would actually be very helpful. But what can you do? You can reset the wifi modem, which consists of turning it off and then turning it back on. Problem solved? Probably not.
Now that you've reached paragraph four, you start thinking about posting this to your blog. And from there your damned imagination flits about, thinking about how famous you'll be among "people" because of your raw style. About how a book full of pointless paragraphs like this one will be a best-seller. You think about what people will think about when they read it: some people will like it because they apparently will recognize its raw beauty. Others will not like it and these will obviously be people that don't understand it. But you know what?
I don't understand it. Your typing to yourself instead of talking to yourself -- which is worse, I don't know and which is sane, probably neither.
You've been thinking about your sanity lately and wondering if you're "all there". Probably not, you suspect at least a touch of sociopathy. You suspect this for many reasons, one of which is your apparent inability to feel empathy. But your mind counters that you
can feel it, you are just afraid to open up emotionally to the extent that you could. As you think now, the emotions that you remember were always in your own terms, weren't they? Have you ever felt sad for someone else? I'm not even sure if you know what that means; emotions are dark unknowns to you and you shy away from them even as you come to understand them better.
Your mind tires, it is ever so slightly frustrated by the fact that you cannot type as fast as you can think, several billion tangents always bouncing through memory and possibility and imagination like celestial pinball. That again makes me question your sanity, but if tangential thought makes me insane then isn't everybody just a variant of insanity? Probably. And that makes me question what "sane" means. Who knows?
I think often about women, but not about what you think. I think a lot about intimacy, about the deep desire to and simultaneous fear to be with someone. I think about what that person will be like, what I would want them to be like. And here again my imagination whirls and collides, producing scenes and attributes and snippets of dialogue, a smile, a body, a characteristic, like some elusive memory from childhood. But it is my imagination and many ventures down this road of thought end up at some variant of this: "how is anyone ever going to put up you?" I am not entirely sure. I am a mystery to myself and the more I discover, the more I feel lost. I try to hold on to things, but soon enough the holding on is more about pride and fear than about dedication to values.
Back to the atomic pinball, the tangents, the ideas, the memories, the possibilities, the everything. Have you even tried to pray like that? I'm sure you have, but you see, part of my current wallowing for some reason must include the possibility that I am so completely different from you so as to constitute a new species of human. This of course is absurd, but it is for some reason a basic construct within my mind. I can trace it back to thoughts and actions in my childhood and especially in high school. A time when my arrogance held true to many "talents" in an effort to feel superior. And I did feel superior, I still do, and that is a scary thought.
So many thoughts, I "shouldn't" feel superior, I "shouldn't" watch that show, I "should" pray more fervently, I "should" live the Gospel, I "should" have gone to church today, I "should" be a worthy priesthood holder, I "should" have a current temple recommend, I "should" study my scriptures, I "should have" been better able to teach that man, I "should" express my testimony more often, I "shouldn't" keep repeating the same sins over and over again, I "should" be more confident in my faith so as to be able to explain what I believe without sounding like I'm the five-star general of a Christian jihad, I "shouldn't" question the veracity of religion itself, I "should" know that God exists, I "shouldn't" be afraid of Satan, I "should" know the difference between desire and temptation, I "should" know that prayers are answered, I "should" know what prayer really means, I "shouldn't" just accept the Gospel because it makes logical sense, I "should" dive deeper into my faith by losing myself in the service of other people, I "shouldn't" be afraid of other people or their interests or their wants or their movements or their voices or their trust or their laughter or their faith or what they're right and wrong about, I "should" make more friends, I "should" at least interact with people, I "should" leave this apartment more often, not just to go to work and come back, I "shouldn't" be afraid to talk, I "shouldn't" convince myself to not do what I think I "should" do, I "should" eat, I "should" want to do something, I "should" want to do anything but sit here and want to do nothing, I "should" be doing something right now, something edifying, something remotely interesting, something spiritual, something that will get me "back on track," something that will restore my confidence in God and in myself, something right now, something that will help me want to be spiritual again, something that will restore my testimony and knowledge that God lives, something that will be more helpful to my happiness and sanity than just sitting here doing nothing and wanting nothing. I "should" do it, I "should" read my scriptures, I "should" believe more fervently, I "should" know. I "should" know something, I "should" know what knowing means and I should have a corner market on it. After all, that's the difference between my religion and all the other ones, right? The fact that you know something. Do I know anything?
I can tell you that I believe that I have a literal spirit inside my body and that that spirit knows things the same way that my brain knows things, but in order to access that knowledge, I have to open myself spiritually, whatever the hell that means. I can tell you I believe that, but that belief is constantly bouncing around with the other billions of thoughts and imaginations and convictions and memories and possibilities and logical pieces of irrelevance such that sometimes I don't know what is imagined and what is real, especially when my convictions are concerned. I've convinced myself of so many beliefs and new beliefs and new beliefs and coupled logic and knowledge with even new beliefs. And part of me says that mortal and spiritual knowledge "shouldn't" mix and that I will never be able to reconcile what I know spiritually with what I know logically. And maybe that is a source of my conflict, especially because another part of me wants to rage against that possibility with all the energies of hell.
My whole life, it seems, has been an attempt to reconcile spiritual and logical knowledge. And so I've gone from paradigm to paradigm, adopting some and creating some, creating some so fantastical so as to feel "forever" confident and secure. And I have felt confident and secure, perhaps far too often, feeling like my own "rightness" makes me that much more superior. Scoffing at those that cannot reconcile their faith with their logic. And so any mental brilliance that I can boast has become a curse, merely a tool to try to quantify God. And the dangerous part is that I have, if only strictly to myself, been far too successful at it, at "knowing" logically what faith is and what the Gospel is and what everything is, and, if not knowing, than at once coming up with a logic paradigm in which to frame it. So damned dangerously good at it, I can give you a million examples and a million justifications for doing it. "Don't want to be a fanatic," I tell myself, "those people that leave logic aside are just blind fanatics." At least that's what I want to believe, and because I want to believe it, and because I can fit it into a logical paradigm, I do believe it. But I can only believe things to the extent of doing them if I have a logical structure in which to place them. Thus, I inevitably fall into the trap of "I have to know logically why I'm doing something or supposed to do something before I do it." It has to fit into my comfortably logical sphere before I can be convinced to do it.
Do I believe that God lives? I don't know. I think I do, but it makes me afraid.
Of course, it
makes sense for God to exist; the Plan of Salvation makes sense, a Savior makes sense, mortality, bodies, resurrection, it all makes sense, or at least I believe that I can figure out why it makes sense if it currently doesn't. Again, the curse of my mind: "I can figure it out; I can solve the puzzle; I can come up with the best explanation." Hell, I just wrote a "spiritual" treatise solving the riddle of fictionally operating outside the laws of physics. And I did it all with my mind; I borrowed from various sources, obviously, but it was all compiled in my imagination -- an entirely new logical paradigm to explain ex-mortal phenomena. Of course I did it, that shouldn't be such a surprise: it's what I've been doing with my faith for my entire life! Creating paradigm after paradigm: adding to my "testimony" and thoroughly convinced that my logical knowledge and my spiritual knowledge were synonymous. That the depth of my thoughts about the Gospel equated to the depth of my convictions and testimony.
Of course, my characteristic tendency at this point would be to swing to the other extreme. That is what I do best, even now I am coming up in my mind with a logical paradigm for spirituality that does not involve a logical paradigm. I'm about to preach to you a new Gospel, one that I'm mentally constructing even as I type, one that makes more sense now, one that reorders the truths that I cannot escape so as to make me feel guilty, but comfortable and confident in that guiltiness. Even now I'm incessantly trying to figure things out, figure out what I "should" and "shouldn't" think and believe in terms of my spirituality.
Answers, I search for the answer, for the solution, for the solution of a Gospel that now I think I believe has no logical solutions -- you see? The other extreme.
"Feel the spirit" is the only "solution" that I can come up with, or want to come up with right now. I desperately want to explore it more, but that's just because I want to come up with a logical paradigm. I want to make sense of it logically so I can hold it in my own hand before moving forward. But you know what, I don't want to let myself do it. I don't want another logical paradigm. I just want to be friends with the Spirit, if there is one, and with Christ, if He exists, and with God, if He exists. I just want to be friends with them, I want to feel loved. I am admittedly afraid to death to actively love and to show my love, I am so afraid to be filled with anything but what is logically sound. But I desperately want to be loved and I think that doing things like prayer, scripture study, and going to church can help me get there. And in time, maybe I can learn better how to love more sincerely, not just act like a friend or act like a leader or act like a teacher, but to actually be someone that truly loves others. Someone that is willing to live his life in constant care and simultaneous joy and sorrow. Am I willing to be that man? Maybe, but you know, maybe the more important question is: is it even really possible for me to be that man? Probably not, probably not for any of us, right? I mean, it's a beautiful ideal, but maybe not something possible just yet. Maybe that's what makes small pieces of charity so beautiful.
For now, I simply want to be loved.
And I love you.