Friday, December 16, 2011

Life is an Onion

As a child of four years old, I was aware of what occurred around me. Not simply did I understand the words but their ulterior intentions. I could perceive irritation, manipulation, subtle messaging. Yet, I was locked within my small frame and spoken to as one unawares. Often, I wondered how long I would have to feign ignorance--until I grew up and realised that the pretense was to endure my entire life.

In my preadolescence, I tested my powers of manipulation. I laid a great trap for a friend of mine and merely observed as she ensnared herself in lies. I did not reveal myself but simply noted that all people will lie and cheat if they deem it feasible and profitable.

Existence is the multitude of rings within an onion. I am on the outermost peel, cynically observing the mid machinations. At times, I have sought to live blindly inside the onion but am always rejected by my perception of falseness. I have tried to numb myself--to overcome the sting of the onion--and to live simply, blindly. It is always in vain.

A few times, I have mastered my own consciousness and internalised my practice so profoundly that I have reached the innermost sanctum of the onion. Those points have been true sweetness: onion divinity. At those moments of nirvana, I have attained what it is for which I have striven with the least effort. It has been as though the circling has momentarily ceased and the rings have aligned into a cosmic pathway. Choices were obvious, delicious. Results were evident and glorious.

But, as with all other occasions, ultimately I have been redeposited at the external trajectory.

Today as I consider the death of Hitch, someone whose body of work speaks to me, I feel more and certain that the onion hardens and bitters. I am rejected by all but the exterior.