Monday, April 30, 2012
Dull and Boring
I read a little excerpt in the paper the other day and I saved it, because it reminded me of the displaced fairy tale thing. There is a town in Oregon named Boring, and another somewhere in Scotland named Dull, and the two are teaming up together in the dreary world; becoming sister communities. It sounded like something right out of Haroun and the Sea of Stories. I wouldn't have been surprised to read that the reporter went to the towns, only to find the people there in a sort of sleep-like state. That they had forgotten how to read, and along with that, had forgotten the names of their towns, had forgotten how they had gotten there in the first place. All they knew is that they pledged their allegiance to their king who they had never seen, located in the darker places of the world, named Kattam-Shud. The reporter left dazzled, fuzzy on why he had gone their in the first place, and how he had turned into a dusty, wandering soul.
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
The Power of Stories
I have three beautiful little girls whose ages are
five, seven and eight, and whose names are Jaden, Trinity, and Grace, respectively.
It amazes me, the endless supply of life and vitality spilling out of them, and
it is a gift to be able to witness them growing from babies into little girls. I
have been given a different perspective on time, watching a baby grow into a
toddler, into a child, into a little girl. No longer do I fix my gaze ahead, on
the path of time stretching itself beyond the horizon. I tend now to stop and
look behind me, or to rest and enjoy the moment I am in. I hear my girls say thing
like “when I’m older, I’ll eat all the candy I want…”, or “I’ll have a hundred
pets…” I wonder sometimes if it is possible to pinpoint the time and place the
change occurs, when a soul realizes the brief period in time their life encompasses,
and start to look back upon childhood in reminiscence. It seems there is a paradox
that occurs in this shift—the harder I try to slow down and enjoy the time I
have, the more elusive that time becomes, slipping from my hands like smoke.
Yet my girls seem to view time as a lifelong enemy, like something to be
conquered, and a year for them inches by like an eternity.
I
have found release from this curse of swift time. It comes upon opening a book
and smelling the familiar scent of ink on paper, of time bound and sealed
between covers. With the opening sentence I am transported to a different realm
of time and reality, whether it is “Once upon a time, in a faraway land…,” or “Call
me Ishmael.” I can read a story and be taken through a hundred years of
fulfilled dreams, of hopes and tragedies and endless adventures. I can witness
the span of a character’s life, see them as a baby and watch them learn life’s
many lessons, be there as they have children of their own and watch them as
they are burdened with the troubles of life and grow weary and old, and I can
try not to cry as they die and their children lay them to rest. And when the
story finally ends, I come back to the place I am, and realize I have not aged
with the characters I have been following. Hundreds of years have not passed by
as I passed through the story with them. For that brief period of time, I was
enchanted, cast into a world of illusion, and experienced those years as if
they were my own. You could say I stole that time. That is just one of the
gifts of a good story.
This
hunger for stories keeps growing within me, and has been doing so for many
years. As a child my father read to me from the children’s Bible, stories from
the Old Testament toned down for young ears. I would lay in bed and listen in
rapture as Samson tore apart lions and slayed Philistines by the thousands, as
Noah gathered all the animals into his ark and God sent rain for forty days and
forty nights, as young David felled the giant Goliath with a single stone. I
have not yet asked my father if he knew then, as he read to me every night, the
great gift he was giving to me. Perhaps he was unaware that he was planting a
magical seed, and the tree it grew into would bear much fruit.
A
child’s mind and heart are naturally able to receive a story as it is meant to
be received, their ears tuned to the real gifts behind the words. I have been
reading my girls fairy tales from the Brothers Grimm, and as I read, I feed off
the spellbound look in their eyes, drinking it in like the water of life as I
enchant them, changing my narrative voice dramatically to capture the souls of
the characters in the stories. I do this because I know they hear something
beyond what most of us can hear from these stories as adults caught up in the
grind of life, burdened with too much “reality”—bills and work and never ending
responsibilities. Our imagination is dulled and we are farther removed from
seeing the world as an infinitely huge, magical place in which anything can
happen. A world in which dragons live and fairies hide themselves from our
eyes, in which animals secretly talk to each other and mermaids can be spotted
with a keen eye. Do you remember believing in these things? These young,
innocent little minds are not blemished with doubt and non belief; they can
easily accept that a frog would talk to a princess, sing her poems, and upon
winning her love, turn into a handsome prince. If I read them Hansel and Gretel,
they are not skeptical of a candy house and how it could be built, but rather
comment on how nice it would be to have a candy house that they could nibble on
whenever they wanted. It is a beautiful thing, witnessing and being a catalyst
of their growing imagination, seeing the sparkle in their eyes as they are
given these pieces of information and believe them.
Every story they hear
is like a piece put into the giant puzzle of life and what it means to live,
and nourishes their imaginative understanding of life as one complex story
manifesting itself. From these tales and stories they experience not only the
magical aspects of life, but also the base aspects—they learn of villains and
treachery, of failed dreams and lost loves, and they see through all of this
the valiant resolution of the characters. They are in the process of learning that
they are the main characters in their own story, and that their own life will
hold peaks and valleys, just like that of the characters they read. “‘It is not
true,’ says Nietzsche, ‘that there is some hidden thought or idea at the bottom
of myth…but the myth itself is a kind of style of thinking. It imparts an idea
of the universe, but does it in a sequence of events, actions, and sufferings.’
This is why we may look into it as into a mirror or fountain full of hints and
prophesies, telling us what we are and how we should behave amidst the
bewildering sequences of surprising events and happenings that are our common
lot” (Zimmer 310). Thus my girls are learning the unpredictability of the world
and the universe, the dual physical and spiritual existence making up their reality,
which is a shifty thing. A strong emotional foundation coupled with an
imaginative mind can get a person through the toughest of times. Looking at
life in this manner will help them cope with whatever fastballs are thrown
their way, help them to see the tragedies and setbacks they will surely
experience as a necessary part of their own adventure.
Another
reason I love to read my daughters these stories is not only because I enjoy
them myself, and don’t mind reading them over and over, but also because these
archetypal stories are screaming to be read out loud. The simple language they
use upon the opening lines speaks to the very idea of a story—it could go
anywhere, be any kind of story that has ever been told. Infinite possibilities
are laid out before the reader in the simplicity and timelessness of the
language, born in the oral tradition of storytellers enchanting their audience
through the power of voice combined with the power of a story. Take Rumpelstiltskin:
“By the side of a wood, in a country a long way off, ran a fine stream of
water; and upon the stream there stood a mill.” Immediately the time, the
place, the details, are all wiped away and become inconsequential. The story
exists in its own time and place, outside of this world but also encompassing
it entirely. The rhythm of the words begs to be spoken, to be told, and the
story itself becomes more powerful as it is spoken. A special kind of bond, a
certain connection, is created between a storyteller and their audience, as if
the very process of creation is awake and in the room. It is easy to imagine,
reading these lines, a tenor-voiced bard speaking slowly, clearly, mystically
to an instantly spellbound audience. When I read these stories to my girls, I
become that bard, the enchanter, casting a spell over them and transporting
them instantly into the story where anything is possible.
Heinrich Zimmer talks about the dilettante in the
first part of King and the Corpse, defining a dilettante as anyone who has
taken a class under Michael Sexson, or more specifically, “What characterizes
the dilettante is his delight in the always preliminary nature of his
never-to-be-culminated understanding” (Kind and the Corpse 4). This person will look at life as a
tapestry of riddles woven together, forming the most beautiful image that
changes, like that of a Rorschach ink test, with the psychology of the
perceiver. They may see stories as mirroring the eternal mystery of life and
why we are here, may hear them with the ears of their ancestors and beyond,
back to the first spark of creation. And this dilettante will understand that
no matter how much of a grasp he thinks he has on the story, no matter how
smart and concise his interpretation, it is all smoke in the wind. Written into
these stories are the experiences and dreams and myths and interpretations of
uncountable generations, changing not only with the patterns of the world but
also with the unpredictable lives of the people reading them. Zimmer says of
these immortal tales: “They are everlasting oracles of light. They have to be
questioned and consulted anew, with every age, each age approaching them with
its own variety of ignorance and understanding, its own set of problems, and
its own inevitable questions. For the life patterns that we of today have to
weave are not the same as those of any other day; the threads to be manipulated
and the knots to be disentangled differ greatly from those of the past”
(K.A.T.C., pg. 4). The dilettante, then, knows he takes with him into a story
his own biases and emotions and stupidity which get mixed into his experience
of the story, like ingredients thrown into a soup. But he will not cease taking
joy in rereading texts and each time discovering something new in it, and he
will know that there will never be an end, to his learning and to the great
riddle of life, to beauties and discoveries lying in wait, because these things
are made immortal in the characters of these stories, and in the stories
themselves. Like T.S. Eliot wrote about all dilettantes in life:
We
shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.
Time is liquid, it can be
dived into. We read today stories from thousands of years ago, and characters
from these stories live on today, will live on for forever. How does this
happen? Arthur and his knights of the round table. Were they real, or mythic?
It doesn’t matter. They live on through us and our delight in reading about
them. What is really interesting is, where did they come from? It is as if they
came from nowhere and everywhere at the same time, so immortal are these tales,
these knights. As if they have been around since the beginning of time, waiting
to be discovered. Perhaps they have no author at all; perhaps they came into existence
from some other place, evolved from primordial soup in the great ocean of
stories. Upon reading them there is a harmony we feel within the story, as if,
somehow, we are reading our own story. The story lives on separate from any
author, as if it was already with us when we were born. Heinrich Zimmer says:
And yet the generations that fashioned these romances are not merely
our spiritual ancestors, but to some extent our physical too. As we read, some
dim ancestral ego of which we are unaware may be nodding approvingly upon
hearing again its old tale, rejoicing to recognize again what once was a part
of its own old wisdom. And if we heed, this inner presence may teach us, also,
how to listen, how to react to these romances, how to understand them and put
them to use in the world of everyday. (K.A.T.C., pgs. 97-98)
The Power of
Words
Masaru Emoto, a Japanese doctor of alternative
medicine, conducted a series of tests on water, freezing samples taken from
different sources and taking pictures of the crystals that form. In one of the
tests conducted, he typed words or sentences filled with emotion onto pieces of
paper, and taped the words to jars holding samples of water taken from the same
source. He wrote words harnessing the beautiful side of life and emotion, such as
“love”, “friendship”, “harmony”, etc., and words harnessing the bad, such as “hate”,
“Demon”, “I want to kill you”, and other negative words. He froze the samples
and took pictures of the crystals that formed, the results of which are truly
amazing. All of the crystals are unique in their own way, seeming to mimic the
emotion behind the word attached to it. All of the words with good intention
formed symmetric, beautiful crystals which are pleasing to the eye, bringing a
feeling of harmony. As if touched by the divine. The crystals formed from words
with bad intention were ugly and deformed, curdling the stomach upon sight, as
if drawn by an evil finger.
How
could this happen? How could the printed word have such power? The spoken word
is one thing; the vibration of sound waves could plausibly alter the
composition of water once passing through it, but how could shapes formed by
ink on paper taped to a jar with water inside alter the composition of said
water? How could words have such power?
Water
accounts for about 65% of what we are made up of. If a written word can make
the composition of water harmonious and beautiful, it can actually change the
composition, somehow, of our bodies. And how much more powerful to show
something, than to say it. We can let the word “love” spill from our lips, or
we can read a love story and experience the ups and downs behind the word, the
turmoil of emotions that come along with it, and in the end, the resolution,
whereupon the closure of the story brings our souls so much closer to that
emotion, that spiritual side of ourselves which is love, than one word ever
could. At that moment, if we were to freeze the molecules within ourselves and
examine the structure of the crystals, the sight might just take our breath
away.
Experiencing
the words put down on paper that come together to form a story is like taking a
sip of the wine aging within that author’s soul. Just as the words we hear
every day and the signifiers we attach to them affect our brain, the words an
author chooses to form sentences are a direct correlation to the psychology of
that author and their emotions at the time. When we read the words put down by
that author we are in a sense stepping into their shoes, trying them on for
size. Reading the words of another can be like a fresh perspective on life,
coaxing us out of the rigid structures of perception we as individuals can
become tied into. This is one of the many lessons that can be taken from Abu Kasem’s
Slippers, stated metaphorically as “change your shoes.” J.R.R. Tolkien addresses
this issue in his essay, On Fairy Stories:
We need, in any case, to
clean our windows; so that the things seen clearly may be freed from the drab
blur of triteness or familiarity—from possessiveness. Of all faces those of our
familiares are the ones both most difficult to play fantastic tricks with, and
most difficult really to see with fresh attention, perceiving their likeness
and unlikeness: that they are faces, and yet unique faces. This triteness is
really the penalty of “appropriation”: the things that are trite, or (in a bad
sense) familiar, are the things that we have appropriated, legally or mentally.
We say we know them. They have become like the things which once attracted us
by their glitter, or their colour, or their shape, and we laid hands on them,
and then locked them in our hoard, acquired them, and acquiring ceased to look
at them.
(On Fairy Stories 19)
The
ultimate goal is to never cease looking at those things that are locked in our
hoard, to take them out continuously and examine them in a new light. To never
cease marveling at the simple things in life and the magic they hold. Whether
it be folklore, myth, a fairy tale or a fictional story, they let us look at
our world in a magical sense, show us there is magic in all things. Tolkien
goes on to say: “It was in fairy-stories that I first
divined the potency of the words, and the wonder of the things, such as stone,
and wood, and iron; tree and grass; house and fire; bread and wine” (On Fairy
Stories 20) Words are indeed potent, for there is no limit to the signification
and history behind each. Take “stone,” for example. We could think of man’s
first rudimentary tools thousands of years ago, a land of saber-toothed tigers
and wooly mammoths and ice-ages. We could think of them, our ancestors, picking
up a stone with a sharp edge and seeing for the first time the possibilities in
it—the first steps of an infant imagination. We could think of this leading to
fire and farming and civilization as we know it. Or we could pick up a stone
and think of the rise and fall of mountains, the vast geological processes that
stone took shape in. Pockets of molten lava cooled and crystallized, slowly
crushed and melted, welded under such immense pressure of this self-cannibalizing
earth. The earth tearing itself apart and diving back in. We could think of
asteroids crashing into the earth from space, from our endless galaxy in an
infinite universe that is expanding, that could be part of an infinite amount
of universes strewn out there like the dice of the gods. We could think of the
elements making up this rock as all formed from that spark of creation we call
the big bang, in which every element that exists was created in fractions of a
second. Who says there is no magic in this world, no mystery? It is stories we
can go to to be a part of this great magic lying in wait, to get a fresh
perspective and awake our minds that have so much potential. Stories are a
displacement of that magic we all seek to know, to harness, and that just might
have too much power for us to possess.
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
The Power of Words
I was just writing a bit for my paper on the power of words, so I googled
a japenese water crystal test I had read about in the past. A japenese
scientist taped words such as "love", "hate", "freindship", ect. to jars of water
taken from different sources-he even did it with holy water. He then froze the water
and magnified it and took pictures, and the results are really amazing. The symetry and harmony withing the crystals formed from beautiful words is clearly mimicking the divine, while the
crystals formed from such words as "demon" or "I hate you" are ugly and deformed,
mimicking the the very depths of hell. You can see where I am going with this. Within
words themselves is the power of heaven and hell. We are all made up mostly of water, everything living needs water to continue doing so. Stories can truly bring us to level of the divine, the words vibrating down into the cells of our body with the harmonics of the gods, changing the makeup of not only our physical structure, but also our souls. Our thoughts and feelings change the structure of the water within ourselves- why not read stories that elevate the mind and emotion, and change the vibration of our very souls? I that way, stories actually can alter our reality. This video is short but sweet, I recommend watching.
a japenese water crystal test I had read about in the past. A japenese
scientist taped words such as "love", "hate", "freindship", ect. to jars of water
taken from different sources-he even did it with holy water. He then froze the water
and magnified it and took pictures, and the results are really amazing. The symetry and harmony withing the crystals formed from beautiful words is clearly mimicking the divine, while the
crystals formed from such words as "demon" or "I hate you" are ugly and deformed,
mimicking the the very depths of hell. You can see where I am going with this. Within
words themselves is the power of heaven and hell. We are all made up mostly of water, everything living needs water to continue doing so. Stories can truly bring us to level of the divine, the words vibrating down into the cells of our body with the harmonics of the gods, changing the makeup of not only our physical structure, but also our souls. Our thoughts and feelings change the structure of the water within ourselves- why not read stories that elevate the mind and emotion, and change the vibration of our very souls? I that way, stories actually can alter our reality. This video is short but sweet, I recommend watching.
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