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    November 09

    A Safe With No Walls

    (From my hand-written journal yesterday while on a plane over the Atlantic)

    I think, in the end, Heaven is a place where all our love, like every perfect feeling I have for Carolyn and my boys, goes. And, those feelings--- that love--- is put in a safe with no walls, where no one can ever interrupt it. It will never diminish. It just grows and grows.

    jrd

    November 04

    Giving & Receiving = Charity

    Giving is vital. But, it is also good to receive. I am not talking about selfishly taking. I'm talking about humbly receiving. Too often, our pride, stubbornness, or other feelings get in the way of receiving what is selflessly, graciously, and kindly offered—everything from a compliment to a generous gift of financial aid or other assistance. Receiving gifts of any sort that are benevolently given by others is very different from taking. Taking implies seizing or capturing what is not offered. This impulse, too, may come from pride and other unproductive feelings.

    God knew that we might need some guidance on the humbling and sanctifying act of receiving when He declared, "Deny not the gifts of God for they are many." Those gifts come in many ways.

    Earlier this year I was chatting with a friend who lives back near my home town (hurray for Minnesota!), and we connect now and again. He and his family had fallen on hard times given the state of the world economy and so forth. When things were at their most difficult and bleak, he received the help that was beyond what he could have ever expected from family and friends. He's a hard-working and self-made kind of man. I know it was hard for him to accept help But, it was a moving thing to hear of his gratitude.

    Five years ago I was blasted by a car while riding my bicycle. My body and brain took severe blows that nearly annihilated me. Recovering (to where I am now) tested me to the limits of my will to live. One day, when a very close friend was visiting with his family from Ephrata Washington, he inquired how I was doing with the various pains and difficulties. After an uplifting visit, they returned home, and just a week or so later we received an enormous shipment at our door. It was a Sleep Number bed, an adjustable sleeping surface that has helped many people with injuries sleep more comfortably. I couldn't hold back the tears as I thought of the generosity of my friend and his family. I phoned him, and expressed my appreciation and surprise. He insisted that repayment was not necessary, and all I could do is thank him with all of the sincerity I possess.

    The gifts we receive are never really about "things". They are really about something deeper, something more lasting and important. Think about a compliment. I have taught my sons that when someone compliments them on something they have done well or on how they look etc., they should be gracious and say simply, "Thank you." Sometimes people feel the need to dismiss a compliment, not wanting to sound arrogant or boastful. Modesty is vita, of course. But, modesty also includes accepting compliment, because all good things do not come from us anyway. To reject the gift of another also denies the giver of the blessings of giving.

    Let me explain with an example. When someone says, "You sing so beautifully," some respond, "Nah. I really suck. I wish I were so much better." Saying this suggests the other person was wrong, it rejects a gift, a compliment, that was genuinely extended. It is better to just say, "Thank you. How kind of you to say." When I receive a compliment such as this I think, "I'm grateful for the gifts God has given me." All good things come from Him.

    Life will always present with opportunities to give, to receive, and even to take. Giving and receiving are two aspects of the same charity. They both involve humility and a willingness to look beyond ourselves, to think about others. Of course, we should do all we can to not be a burden to others, to "carry our own water" so to speak. But, when we are in need, when, after all we can do, we find ourselves in difficulty, it is a beautiful thing to receive the gifts of God with gratitude. When we are in a position to give, we should give from that same sense of gratitude and love--- Grace.

    In the end, when the stage of mortality is dismantled, and we've all gone home, we'll all need a generous helping of Grace.

    JRD

    October 24

    Luck and Leaving Las Vegas

    An unforgiving city granted an act of mercy, sending me off into the sky--- lonely little Moses in a cradle of steel floating on a river of air. Solitude gives rise to a peculiar reverence. The memory of a loved one is a priest to whom we confess a future that may never be. That's when a heart truly breaks. In the utter vulnerability of that moment we are strong as we can ever be.

       

    Landscapes are intimidating. The earth's generosity and ferocity seem unintentional. It is never distracted from its destiny—to carve canyons out of granite tables, to force trees and grass out of stony ground, to drive mountains up further up into the sky—a giant engine of perpetual, insouciant change. And, its by-product is a circumstance in which we thrive against the odds, and luck seems to go our way. In the accidental bounty the planet provides we create the things that can never be the result of chance: love, humanity, selflessness, compassion. If luck is defying chance, then we can say we are lucky beyond measure.

       

    Rivers, mountains, sprawling meadows, and oceans don't know what true luck looks like. But, we do. Luck is the shape of a child's smile. It is the warmth of a lover's kiss. Luck is unguarded laughter of children at play. It is the gentle pressure of a baby's hand around your finger. It is looking into your lover's eyes and knowing that you are understood, accepted, and known.

       

    Chance, landscape, luck, humanity, uncertainty, and change--- weighty thoughts while I leave the capital of counterfeit luck-- where many people desperately chase what they know is an inevitable mirage. I depart richer than when I arrived: the true treasures of my life acquired yet a little more value, became a little more dear while I was a stranger in a strange land.

    October 12

    Just Nobodies or Compassionate People?

    I was once at a store with my boys, and they were rolling in on their Heely shoes. As we passed the fellow at the door who verifies whether one has a membership card he loudly barked, "Hey! You guys can't roll on those in here!" His reaction was over-the-top; it was harsh and unkind. I paused and waited. Then, I drew close to the man and gently put my hand on his shoulder. I said in a quiet voice, audible to just him and me, "Sir, these are good boys here. It is good to speak to them kindly, and they will listen. I want you to work on that—to say things kindly first." He was a little stunned, because I think he was expecting me to be angry. He then replied with a bit of a stutter, "Oh….Uh… Yeah. I'm sorry." I smiled, and we walked on. I felt at peace. I hope the man at the door felt that way too. There was no confrontation or anger between us. I wish I always reacted so kindly in such situations.

    We have all experienced interactions where things escalated quickly and disproportionately. People seem quick to anger over small things. We sometimes treat each other as if we're not people at all—as if we are just nobodies—gears in a big machine that will ultimately fail us. We can say to ourselves, "That person is just a customer." Or "Hey—she's just a cashier", and "He's just a guy work with." Then, we treat that [fill in the blank human functional character] in a less human way—keeping the distance between us. In so doing, we're acting on instinct, following the least elevated inclinations of ourselves. We use the word "just" to reduce the people around us to someone less than they really are.

    What if we looked at each other more as compassionate people first? Sure, there are times we won't agree. Yes, there are times when there will be gaps in understanding. But, let's not forget we're people after all. Like it or not, we're on this big stage together. I like the simple words of a children's song:

    I want to be kind to everyone, for that is right you see

    So I say to myself, "Remember this: kindness begins with me"

     

    --John

    October 11

    Don’t Forget to Write (not type!)

    I was reading some of the latest entries from Billy Corgan's thought provoking site. In a 3-part segment he explores the feelings of a young man writing a love letter. He adds this aside, "Yes, people in remote parts of the world still write letters!!". I'm one of those people, and I guess our little town of Duvall Washington is sort of remote! Anyway, I still write quite a number of hand-written letters each year (I prefer the Uni-Ball Signo pen, in case you wondered). Receiving a hand-crafted letter or note is something special. Here's a little story about the impact of a simple letter.

    My father was recently digging through some photo albums my dear mother had hastily put together prior to her death. They had been left in a box in the years since her passing, and he stumbled on them one day. I happened to phone him just moments after he found the box. We reminisced as he turned the pages. He told me stories about the people he recognized in the old photos. Then, he found a few letters tucked in the pages of the album. They were the few letters his father had sent to him during World War II. He read them to me, and we wept.

    My grandfather was drafted into the war when my father was just three years old. He left my grandmother and my father alone and soon found himself floating around on the USS Richmond patrolling the Pacific ocean. In the letters to my father, he drew little pictures and wrote a little poem that revealed the simple hopes and dreams he harbored while mixed up in the sad business of war. He drew a picture of him and his son with a beautiful dog. And, he wrote a poem about going fishing some day with his boy, how they would toss a line in the water and never worry about what time they would need to go home.

    I have held those letters many times. I've seen the way the graphite merged with the paper to create colors, strokes, and characters. The immediacy of knowing his pencil was on that paper while on that ship in that ocean while thinking about his boy brings my grandfather so much closer. If he had typed it on a machine, or if computers had existed and he had typed it in a word processor, you can see that it just wouldn't have been the same. His hand writing conjures his presence. I can imagine him in a cramped bunk writing that note, holding that pencil, hearing those planes.

    So, when I want to send a thank you to a friend, a love note to my wife, or a message of praise or encouragement to one of my five sons, I do it in with a pen and ink. They know it's special. They'll treasure the gesture, and it will last long after the computers have been recycled. When my sons stumble on the notes I wrote to them, and they read them to their sons or daughters on the phone, perhaps the appreciative tears will flow as they did for my father and me.

    --John

    October 07

    Horizon

    I played the guitar for hours this past weekend, and along the way, I wrote another simple song. I hope you like it.

    It's called, Horizon

    I'm a little beam of light

    But I can't find the sun

    I keep my legs movin'

    But I don't know where to run

    The sky took me in again

    The night said 'Welcome home'

    And, I got the nod from Dylan

    Now I'm a genuine rolling stone

       

    My heart was saying something

    I couldn't understand

    I'm alone

       

    I'm a timid little whisper

    I'm a shout when I'm hurt

    A lonely little prince tamed

    By a rose in the dirt

    Does Heaven have my number

    'Cause I'm getting calls from Hell

    How am I down here?

    I was hoping you could tell

       

    I tried to get lost

    So I could be found

    Where am I now?

       

    I'm a sound without a song

    A star wiithout a sky

    The truth sometimes hurts, but

    It's better than a lie

    I've learned that the horizon

    Isn't sky and isn't land

    It's a line that makes you wonder

    Exactly where you stand

       

    I've run out of time

    The sun set long ago

    Which way is home?

     

    -© 2009 John R. Durant

    August 31

    Mute Insteads

    Taste that light

    When I touch

    Kill and fight

    Hurt so much

    I'm not free

    Claw my skin

    Being me

    Borrowed sin

    Dig so deep

    Treasure soul

    Let me sleep

    Dreams in tow

    Wrapped around

    Glory shreds

    Shouting down

    Mute insteads

    --John R. Durant July 14th 2008

    [ Wrote this last year. I still like some of the turns in here—an exploration of the space within a struggle, a kind of impressionistic contemplation of what could have been but can never be]

    August 21

    Ghost Water

    Ghost water night
    No thoughts are in my head
    Restless muted walls
    And my eyes under the bed
    This is the end
    My black has turned to blue
    I have no feet
    But I'm wearing one left shoe
    I
    Need some time
    A way to kill this moment
    That has no vital signs
    I, me, mine
    Here in the darkness
    I look just fine
     
    John R. Durant---2004
     
    August 16

    57 Mile Backpacking Trip

    On Monday, August 10th, I left on a 57 backpacking trip with my son, Andrew (15), four other young lads from Church, and two other youth leaders, Brothers Tyler Allen and Bryan Wheeler. We trekked from Steven's Pass to Snoqualmie Pass in 5 days. You can find the pictures here. At the same time, another group of boys and their leaders, led by Spence Darrington, began the same journey from the opposite direction. We met in the middle at Lake Waptus, the only rain-free period of the trip. It was great to see the whole group together, and a message from the scriptures while we gathered around the fire lifted our spirits.
     
    The pictures tell some of the story of the trip. Sadly, we have nearly none of the last 20 miles, because we were so frozen cold that we didn't want to stop for photos. On Friday we did the last 20 miles in about 7 hours of constant hiking up mountainsides and across narrow paths clinging to the rock.
     
    At the end of it all, we went to Arbys where the boys filled up on Bacon Cheddar Roastburgers!
     
    It is an experience I'll never forget, and the bond between us all is something special. We suffered plenty on the trek, but all in a good way. As my motto goes, "Nothing's fun until it hurts." Thus, this trip was lots of fun! I am eager to do it again with James, then John, then, Paul, then Steven as they grow a little older.
     
     
    July 06

    Waiting For A Ride

    Here’s another song I wrote—the story just impressed itself strongly on my mind. A guy is somewhere in Nevada at night, drifting, leaving some things and someone behind, not sure where the road will take him next. He just knows he needs to keep moving, and he’s waiting for a ride. There are three verses, three choruses and a bridge. Enjoy.

     Waiting For A Ride

    Got some trouble, it gave my pen an itch

    Sewed my wounds but off by a stitch

    Highway night crowds my eyes with stars

    And the mocking light of the passing cars

     

    Just a dream away

    Our warm bed

    Just a dream away

    Things I should've said

    Just a dream away

    Touching you just so

    Just a dream away

    Everywhere I want to go

    Is just a dream away

     

    Out here the moon seems alone like me

    In this darkness I can better see

    That the past is rarely ever clear

    And I don't know where I'll go from here

     

    Just a dream away

    A second chance

    Just a dream away

    The way we dance

    Just a dream away

    Nothing is lost

    Just a dream away

    Hurt has no cost

    Just a dream away

    [bridge]

    But now I know

    I'm not afraid anymore

    To feel what I feel

    To open any door

    When I'm empty inside

    I've got nothing to hide

    Even I was with you

    I was just waiting for a ride

     

    So, it's for the best that I'm out here

    Where broken hearts have nothing to fear

    Sitting on the road, stood up by my pride

    With everywhere to go and waiting for a ride

     

    Just a dream away

    You holding my hand

    Just a dream away

    A safe place to land

    Just a dream away

    Love is a distant tide

    Just a dream away

    When your waiting for a ride

    That's just a dream away

    ---June 30th 2009

    June 22

    Time Takes Time

    I/m clearing out old stuff, and I wrote this song in August 2006. I had been all pulverized two years previously and I was learning about suffering in new ways. Through it all, I learned the simple truth that Time Takes Time. Thanks Mr. Starkey.

    enjoy…

    No fun inside here
    Out of sight
    Not out of mind
    A million moments to be alone
    Mother Nature
    Isn’t always kind
    Patient indifference
    To a fight
    A tired a fighter inside
    No way to sleep
    While watches unwind
    Warriors and little Braves
    Gentle winds and Butterfly graves
    Time takes time
    Lusty breath and coma rain
    Dust in a destiny of pain
    Times takes time
    Storms that devour a helpless sky
    Hurt that doesn’t know at all why
    Time takes time
    All my secrets
    Just to shy
    To admit they are sin
    Teeth in bones
    She’s got a very funny grin

     

    -john r durant August 2006

    June 09

    Greenfields—a new poem I wrote

    Losing things as fast as I can

    Curled up like a child just how I began

    Dust-bin Danny's got a crooked walk

    His lonely secrets beg him to talk

    Every Winter feels just like Spring

    Since I died I don't feel a thing

    Sweet, sweet gentle suicide

    Lets all my courage run and hide

    Not all that's dark is bad for me

    Inky silence sets me free

    Every night whispers "The end"

    Dawn laughs it off, "Let's do it again"

    I'm a tired fighter-- tasted too much blood

    A weary little dove after the flood

    A wide-eyed junkie waiting for a fix

    A bruised lover just taking her licks

    These wounds I was meant to own

    Make me unafraid and alone

    I wish that I could shine like you

    Bought my halo with an I.O.U.

    Keeping these ghosts alive

    Something dies just to survive

    Greenfields

    The promise of something new

    Greenfields

    It's down to just me and you

    May 2009

    April 16

    Most Expensive Guitar in the Word

    I discovered today that the 1978 Washburn Hawk model that I own (still with original humbuckers, bridge, the works) is identical (same year, same model, same finish, everything) as the most expensive guitar in the world: http://www.guitarsite.com/hotlicks/about4401.html
     
    It turns out that Bob Marley had a guitar identical to my own, and he gave it to his tech and friend, Sir Johan Carlsen III, after a show in 1979. For reasons you can discover following the link above, it has been certified as the most expensive guitar in the world.
     
    What makes it truly priceless is the sounds it produces. It has the a beautiful, unmatchable tone. I cannot imagine the world without the sounds this guitar makes. It is simply a miracle. Knowing that Bob was also enchanted by its spell makes me smile. I hope he's listening (and kindly tolerant) when I play. It's magic.
     
    John
    April 07

    Embrace in the Freefall

    I wrote some thoughts in my journal a few days ago that I believe will be useful to others, especially those faced with challenges that make them shudder. Here’s what I wrote:

    “God, if He truly loves us, must push us to our limit and then a step beyond: the unknown. This is when the full trust begins. Paradoxically but nonetheless precisely: this point of freefall is when we receive the Embrace. We ultimately choose between hope and despair. Because God wants to bring out the godliness within us, He escorts out onto the plane where the greatest challenges go down. He may use health problems, poverty, family problems, or other tragedies of great variety to bring us there. Then, while in the throes of that struggle we are in a position to choose between despair and hope. Our gesture of will at this point writes the truest story. This is when our legacy becomes everlasting.”

    My experience has taught me that the words I just wrote are precisely true. It has taken pain, time, and many hours of reflection to understand what these things mean, their value, and how to express them.

    Let me know if these words help. Tell me your story.

    March 11

    Gone but still here

     

    I’ve got a cruel friend

    He won’t leave me alone

    He pushes me

    Between a rock and a stone

    The gritty powder

    Between my teeth

    Soon I’ll forget

    All that’s ugly beneath

        Oh love

        I think you know

    I can’t help myself

    I was born to worry

    That blur- my destiny

    It’s in such a hurry

    I’m looking through

    A hole in this cloud

    And, what I can’t change

    Is shouting-- so loud

        Oh love

        I think you know

    When you were as close

    As close as you could be

    It was so complicated

    Just to be me

    So many things

    My heart couldn’t say

    My aches and sorrows

    They got in the way

    My shadow grew

    While yours was the same

    I was breathless and weary

    When the morning came

        Oh love

        I think you know

     

    ---- March 2009 © John R. Durant

    February 12

    Is Hell Other People? Insomnia

    Jean-Paul Sartre famously wrote, "L'enfer c'est les autres". For you non-French speakers this means (roughly): Hell is other people.

    This was uttered in a magnificent play, "Huis clos" or "No Exit". The "protagonist" is stricken with no eyelids during the play. He cannot close his eyes and hide from the gaze of others. It is their constant surveying of him, his morality, his well-being, his disposition, that he cannot bear. To be in the constant gaze of others is a kind of hell.

    I don't believe Sartre got it completely right. But, there is a practical truth in what he says. Make enough friends and you'll learn that they can often be the source of the greatest hurt.

    On one occasion of being betrayed by someone, I was so angry with myself for letting my guard down, for allowing myself to be so vulnerable to the deception or attach from a friend. I got burned, and at the end of the poem is a futile vow to never fall under the fatal sleeping spell of friendship. Despite our best attempts, we end up trusting people again, and we get hurt sometimes. Hopefully, we one day realize that we are at greater risk trusting no one than trusting and getting hurt.

    Here's the poem in the harsh simplicity of my hurt.

    Insomnia

    I had a dream

    In vicious technicolor

    The actors all knew

    Just how to hurt each other

    It seemed so innocent

    The laughter seemed to flow

    The cuts grew only deeper

    We pretended not to know

    The smiles were always false

    The kindnesses were lies

    Thoughtfulness was poison

    Trust and loyalty were spies

    The end had to come

    I somehow always knew

    We slept and we dreamed

    My how the time flew

    I'm awake now

    I refuse to sleep again

    Hell is other people

    The Devil is a friend

    I'm awake now

    Only fools fall asleep

    The weary walking wakeful

    Have secrets they must keep

    I'm awake now

    I'm awake now

    I'm awake now

    I'm awake now

    I'm awake now

    And now, And now

    And now, And now

    And now, And now

    And now, And now

    Now, Now, Now

    Now, Now,

    Now

    No....

    February 10

    Freedom Song

    This is another rock song my sons and I play. It usually gets a good reception. It's called "Freedom". I had not conscious agenda when writing this song. I never intended it to be political in the least. For my part, it's not a song about the Iraq war or anything like that (some have suggested this). It's about something else-- you'll figure it out.

     

    Freedom

    We chase the night to find

    We're out of sight, not out of mind

    We know it's time for a change

    We'll take a stroll on the firing range

     

    Can't hold my thoughts tonight

    Can't hold my thoughts tonight

    Can't hold my thoughts tonight

    Can't hold my thoughts tonight

     

    Come lay your cares on me

    Sand in my eyes so I can see

    We'll chase the dawn then we'll sleep

    We'll shed our dreams, buried deep

     

    Can't hold my thoughts tonight

    Can't hold my thoughts tonight

    Can't hold my thoughts tonight

    Can't hold my thoughts tonight

     

    I felt your touch, your space

    The shape of the moon, your face

     

    We'll bleed our lives into the sun

    Who knew dying could be so fun?

    Now that we've lost all we'd won

    We'll shout our freedom from a gun

     

    Can't hold my thoughts tonight

    Can't hold my thoughts tonight

    Can't hold my thoughts tonight

    Can't hold my thoughts tonight

    February 09

    Little Birds

    Candles melt down

    But we remember the light

    We welcome the dawn

    But we treasure the night

    Our dreams scatter like birds

    And our fears hunt them down

     

    ----

    I wrote this in July last year (at 3:38 pm) while sitting at my desk at work.

     

    February 05

    Raw Dump of Music I've Listened to in the Last 24 Hours

    Here it is in chronological order:

    • Staind: Spleen
    • Lamb of God: Omerta
    • Joan Jett: Hit Me With Your Best Shot
    • Neil Young: Down by the River
    • Soulfly: Warmaggedon
    • The Smashing Pumpkins: Why Am I So Tired?
    • Meshuggah: Corrdior of Chameleons
    • Mogwai: Glasgow Mega-Snake
    • Slipknot: Psychosocial
    • Annie Lennox: Why
    • Duran Duran: Come Undone
    • Pennywise: F#%# Authority
    • Phish: Loving Cup
    • Overcast: Diluting Inertia
    • At the Gates: Under the Serpent's Head
    • Gama Bomb: Sentenced to Thrash
    • Joni Mitchell and Johnny Cash (duet)
    • Ry Cooder (also duet with Johnny Cash)
    • Derek and the Dominoes
    • Fleetwood Mac and Johnny Cash: This is Rock
    • 10cc: Art for Art's Sake
    • Jeff Beck: Bolero
    • The Doors: Land Ho!
    • The Beatles: I'm Only Sleeping
    • Alice Cooper: Welcome to My Nightmare
    • The Cure: 4:13
    • Brad Paisley: Mud on the Tires
    • Brad Paisley: Celebrity
    February 02

    Wounds, Myths, and Reality

    Break enough bones and they begin to really speak to you. I listened all through the night and arrived at this thought which I won't bother to explain.

     

    "Behind every Wound is a myth that bears the burden of being true."