Where were we?
Today. Here. Now. This moment. As in ... being in it.
I am close to confirming that my 15th Anniversary Tour of the mid-life crisis I purposely launched at 30—just to get it out of the way—is reaching its climactic conclusion and may end. (I had no idea it would last more than a decade. Okay, fine—it was more than 15 years ago when I launched it. But like an Arnold Schwarzenegger movie, it never seems to want to end.)
This morning, seven cocks crowed randomly near
the sugar cane fields in Lower Kula, on Maui, as I sat on the chestnut-colored
sofa in the Up Country home in which I had been deposited by The Universe.
I will be here for three months, engaging in a few writing projects, overseeing
the land, and—let's hope!—renew and reawaken in a new way, personally,
psychologically, spiritually.
Professionally?
Well, I listened to all of those crowing cocks
with great interest, marveling at Mother Nature's handiwork; the seamless
precision SHE gifted these creatures to instinctively do what they do so well
at the time that they do it. Every day.
Yesterday, when I was visiting the nearby town
of Makawao, I realized that the loose chickens there—and all around the island,
actually—give new meaning to the term Free Range. They wander around in the
middle of the road, in parking lots, in fields, and almost all of them seem to
be offering their deep devotion to their male suitors, whose early-morning vocal
prowess never waivers. It was there, in this historic Maui locale, that I
realized the true answer to age-old question: Why did the chicken cross the
road?
It was never "to get to the other
side."
It was to get to her cock.
Such devotion. Such love. I made a mental note
of it, musing on author Michael Drury's proclamation that "if there's a
secret to be loved, it lies in not having to have it."
Indeed.
The cock. The chicken.
Dear Lord—for once, doing the math is easy.
Back to today and an early-morning meditation ... something I am embarking on daily because, well, when Maui calls you to come to Her from out of the blue, it's a gift and I sense there's a reason why I am here, other than why I think I am here, which is, partly, to oversee a home and its property while the owners are away on a business adventure on the Mainland.
Later, when I met with my colleagues/the
homeowners on the upper deck, they pointed out the small olive plantation—can a
"plantation" actually be small?—that I will oversee during their
absence.
Olives.
Olives?
How did I arrive here?
I thought I was going to
continue venturing forth with reckless abandon as an entertainment
journalist. I thought I was going to continue doing celebrity interviews. I
thought I would—gosh, I don't know, replace Mario Lopez on that entertainment
news program? Well, Stalin changed all of that. The book about my Polish family
changed all of that. Losing the editorship of a longtime job in a vibrant
Northern California community changed all that.
And, frankly, I am grateful.
Apparently, there is something else I am to be
doing—for now. And if means daily dosing myself on the Tao, Deepak Chopra,
Wayne Dyer, Caroline Myss, or chanting in some Temple of Peace or Sacred Gardenon Maui—fine. I am going to do it! I asked for a sign on what to do with my
life. This popped up . I am shutting up and showing up for the (spiritual) work
at hand. Nine to Five? Please—it's just a movie and Dolly Parton song to me
now. (I think. I hope ... Right?)
Olives.
This morning I learned that it takes an olive
tree about five to seven years to come into its own. And then ... it—how do I
put this?—never really goes away. Mother Nature. Again—SHE knows what she is
doing. I also discovered from the owners here in Kula that there are
5,000-year-old olive trees in Italy and Greece and elsewhere, and that the
olive tree—olives—are part of a fascinating social and cultural fabric. Yes. Of
course. I must have learned this somewhere but it must have gotten buried
somewhere in the nether regions of mind after 15 years of Trying To Get Ahead
And Make A Name For Myself.
The indigenous olive tree (the wild olive tree)
first made an appearance in the eastern Mediterranean, however Greece first
cultivated them. Flashback—way back—to 50,000 years ago and there were, of
course, olives, olive oil. All of it.
So ... next week, I begin my daily sojourn out
into the olive field to see if the year-old plants are doing well; if the
irrigation is, well, irrigating all of them correctly.
Perhaps there's a deeper lesson to be learned.
Although I doubt it has anything the Master Teacher Jesus praying on The Mount
of Olives, although I could be wrong. Back in the 1990s, I had a dream that J
came up to me at the coffeebar where I was a barista. I saw him standing there.
(Yes, he was wearing a white robe). I smiled and said: "Can I help
you?" He gently tapped the counter a few times and said: "I would
like some service."
(I certainly hope all my navel-gazing,
publishing, lighting white sage and spotlighting Agents of Change worked in my
favor.)
Anyway the point is this: Can I now benefit
from slowing down on a daily basis by walking atop rich fertile soil? With my
feet planted firmly on the ground—this Maui ground—is there a chance I can
become more attune with the deeper significance of the meaning of
"home" and something other than just Making A Living? Sure—that's
important. But here I am. I am perched on top of a baby olive field, for
goodness sake. I am not sitting in a cubicle.
When in Rome ... right?
Or, in this case, when amongst baby olive
trees.
Onward ...
Hope this won't be a duplicate comment; I wrote another one and I must have pressed the "duh!" button as it didn't post. Boo hoo!
ReplyDeleteAnyway, I loved reading this post. The writing flows like river of gleaming orange magma! Lots of great lines but of course one of my faves is "It was to get to her cock." because it's true, dammit!
A wonderful blog! I'm so glad you're recording your adventures and sharing them with us. Please don't stop. :) And MAHALO for doing this.
XOXO
Dy