One thing about Roald Dahl’s riveting memoir Going Solo (discussed earlier), which is
something I’ve thought, and have
actually written about in this venue.
And if I haven’t, I am doing it now.
(Note: Sometimes,
I forget I wrote something and I write it again. Sometimes, I think I wrote something when I actually didn’t. It is interesting to
be me.)
When I turn from Page 79 – where he describes being ferried
across an African river crawling with crocodiles – I discover that Dahl too has “turned the page”, moving from ravenous
crocodiles to Zen-infused elephants.
Let me momentary digress to say this about writers.
The adept ones are more than able practitioners of
particular genres. The standouts are
quality writers who, for one reason or another, fell into participating in
those genres. Donna Leon is a delightful
writer who happens to write mysteries.
Roald Dahl is a splendid writer, world famous for kids’ books. Others write mysteries and kids’ books, but
you do not remember the writing. You may
not even remember the books.
When a writer of Dahl’s abilities takes to penning a memoir,
you can expect more than “I went there, and did that.” Two things jump out on Page 80 alone!
First, the way he describes the “big tuskers” he drives past:
“Their skin hung loose
over their bodies like suits they had inherited from larger ancestors, with the
trousers ridiculously baggy.”
You can imagine an excited illustrator, eagerly licking
their chops.
“I can draw that
funny!”
Dahl signals “I’ve got ‘Kids’ books’ in me” in his serious
memoir. More importantly (at least for this post) is Dahl’s description of the
pachyderm’s peaceful placidity.
“ A great sense of
peace and tranquility seemed to surround these massive, slow-moving, gentle
beasts… They seemed to be leading a life of absolute contentment.”
My mind jumps immediately to the deer that visit the yard of
our Indiana log cabin, legging languidly across the street to lunch on the leaves
from our trees’ low-hanging branches.
(As I silently watch from our adjacent screened-in porch,
noting the same “peace and tranquility”
and “absolute contentment.”)
(And the rest is about me.)
Here’s what people do to become grounded and “present” and
stress-free and calm. Or at least one thing we do.
We meditate.
Meditation, at its best – which it always is; the fluctuation’s
in the practitioner – soothingly settles the mind, banning the nagging
agitation caused by worries about the future.
Meditation helps you remain comfortably in the “Now.” At its best, if you think anything, you think,
“This breath is quite pleasant. And that is all that concerns me.”
Seeking to upgrade my meditation technique, I pursue
“calmness” relentlessly. Which is the
wrong way to pursue calmness. You have
to pursue calmness calmly. Of course, if
I could do that, I would not need to
meditate.
You know who are blissfully free of this circular conundrum?
Animals.
(I know. There are
monkeys that fret and house pets that whimper.
But overall, animals do not know what we know. That’s why so few
of them acquire life insurance.)
Animals “meditate” naturally. Yes, “Flight of Flight” remains an essential
“Go-to” in their survivalist tool bags.
But those moments are isolated. Munching
the foliage in our yard, the deer are not
thinking,
“Should I be worried right now, or just munching? There are cars that can run me over, crossing
the street. Roving bobcats could tear me
to pieces. Who knows? These leaves could be terrible for me. Oh, yeah, and it’s ‘Deer Hunting Season’!’ And I’m supposed to say calm?”
(The preceding was a depiction of me, if I were a deer.)
On my desk is a printout of a photograph of a young deer, looking
still – Of course, it’s a photograph!
– groundedly “present and radiantly relaxed.
I look at that picture when I feel suddenly jumpy, and it successfully
brings me “back home.”
Now, for variety, Dahl has taught me,
I can add pictures of elephants.
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