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Burning Water
Here I am, back again after a mysterious absence. Some of you will get very late replies to comments, and for this I apologize. Between Thanksgiving, visits with family, a heavy workload, and business travels in North Carolina, my LJ usage has taken a hit.

It wasn't that long ago that I felt like schizophrenic local, Sam, who was standing in the middle of the street, tears streaming from his eyes, getting pummeled by the torrential rain, responding angrily to the offensive, blank stare of a locked red door; swearing and shouting at the top of his lungs while cocooned pedestrians without umbrellas shuffled by with their heads lowered muttering, "I hear ya man."

However, I had a series of twitches the other day which usually indicates some unusual psychic activity at the Octagon. For those that don't know, the Octagon is a roofless old ruin on little ol' forgotten Roosevelt Island next to Manhattan. Given that it was once a "lunatic asylum," it remains charged with a certain chaotic energy which can be seen from across the East River on a good summer day as a golden discharge through its blown out windows. Anything that happens in NYC, from the slightest shiver of a leaf on the Hare Krishna tree, to the unexpected swipe of a tapas platter from the sidewalk tables of a upscale restaurant awkwardly venturing into Alphabet City-- has a precise cosmic action within the ruinous boundaries of the Octagon, different in form, perhaps, but equal in transcendental significance.

At any rate, the series of twitches I received was unsettling and flushed me out onto the street to join an unexpected array of characters that seemed to be equally affected by the same tremor. Now, nearly every day for the six years in which I have resided in this current apartment, I pass the "Garage Man," an agoraphobic resident who refuses to take one step outside his oily cavern. Even his dog must walk to the full extension of his leash from within the shadowy lair to deposit his feces in the gutter before returning to his hidden master. Garage Man has a inwardly shriveled face, as if a giant had reached down and pinched it. It was after my spasm of twitches that I wandered about the neighborhood, contracting and extending my muscles and cranky joints, before I came upon Garage Man and his dog making their way down a quiet side street. The dog seemed wide-eyed and excited, glancing about as if each and every thing were made of ice cream and chicken. Garage Man was trembling, taking each step only after a series of long breaths. His face seemed to suck itself in and then relax again, repeatedly, not used to the stings of sunlight.

I like to imagine that this was a life-changing event for him. That the Octagon had some great reason for uprooting him from his garage in order that he claim the destiny that awaits him. Assuming he didn't come across the block which some sarcastic fellow littered with plain white boxes each labeled "Suspicious Package," he probably makes regular, fearless tours of the neighborhood, observing all that he has missed out on for years and years.

And so, finding myself strolling up and down my festive holiday-light filled street, shaking hands with the occasional sidewalk Christmas tree and pointing out the presence of flies in my cafe-mate's coffees, I have decided to run with this whole "get out and experience the world" thing which, for me, has suffered lately.

I hope you all will join me!

Comments

[info]ilenebook wrote:
Dec. 7th, 2005 05:07 am (UTC)
*toasts to the garage man and his dog....and to new beginnings*
Nice to read your posts again.
[info]andala wrote:
Dec. 7th, 2005 06:18 pm (UTC)
Thanks, good to be back. *toasts* To new beginnings! :D
[info]maggieroofus wrote:
Dec. 7th, 2005 05:26 am (UTC)
My curiosity and fascination with such places I did a Google search on this place. Thanks for sharing!
[info]andala wrote:
Dec. 7th, 2005 06:32 pm (UTC)
Fascinating... I would love to tour that place! I have always had a special fascination with mental health facilities. Working in one was probably the most interesting job I've ever had.
[info]ethereal_lad wrote:
Dec. 7th, 2005 11:50 am (UTC)
Welcome back...
nice to read your prose again.
if you look back in my journal, you will see a recommendation tailor made for you!
[info]andala wrote:
Dec. 7th, 2005 06:38 pm (UTC)
Re: Welcome back...
Thanks Craig! BTW, pissed at Dakini for *still* not sending your b-day gift. I'll take care of it.

Okay, I'll check it out. Gonna get caught up with LJ today. You'll also here from me very soon about something else.
[info]niyabinghi wrote:
Dec. 7th, 2005 01:38 pm (UTC)
Well hey there breath of fresh air, so good to see some of your writing/way of being-ness in the world again!
[info]andala wrote:
Dec. 7th, 2005 06:42 pm (UTC)
being-ness and non-being-ness
That's me, one fresh Aries. :P
Happy to be writing here again. I need to tune back into Nannedom now... :)
[info]minn wrote:
Dec. 7th, 2005 02:25 pm (UTC)
As always, your words paint walking, talking, breathing visuals in my mind's eye. Brilliant post, hon. :)

Would love to run into the Garage Man sometime. And good ol' Sam, of course. I have this irreprisible urge to shake Sam's hand.
[info]andala wrote:
Dec. 7th, 2005 06:46 pm (UTC)
Thanks! :D You will surely meet him and Sam. I'll show you both when you get here next week. Sam especially will be delighted to meet you, but he may start talking about your beautiful eyes which he found on a beach one day, 200 years ago. xoxo
[info]zhenzhi wrote:
Dec. 24th, 2005 09:40 am (UTC)
wishing you the very best of everything, with love xoxo :-)
[info]andala wrote:
Jan. 19th, 2006 02:15 am (UTC)
Thank you zhenzhi! :D