Creative Licence

Write Me

I contain multitudes

June 25, 2004

 

ages-of-man.jpg

I am a wiry cowboy or maybe an ex-con, sideburned, sunburned, sheathed in jailhouse tats, wearing Dickies, Vitalis and Old Spice, a hand-roll dangling below my Fu-Manchu, stonily silent, a solid peckerwood who's 1000-yard-staring through glacial blue eyes.
I am Robert DeNiro as Vito Corleone in Godfather II. Poised, determined, resourceful, lethal.
I am Aimee Mann: thin, blonde, beautiful; cynical, hilarious,profane; part angel, part construction worker.
I am Eminem.
I am Miles.
I am Tyson.
I am the Dalai Lama.
I am Jimi Hendrix: my fingers scrabbling and singing across the strings, my cheeks sucked in, my eyes closed, my shirt a riot of psychedelic paisley.
I am Steve McQueen, leaping the barbed wire fence into Switzerland on the back of a stolen German motorbike.
I am George W. Bush: idealistic, inflexible, nihilistic, Texan.
I am Bill Clinton: idealistic, brilliant, magnetic, damaged.
I am Francis Bacon.
I am Warren Buffett.
I am Jesus Christ.
I am Keith Richards: kohl eyes, turtle skin, brown bony arms gripping my axe.
I am Curtis, holding a piece of cardboard and a cup on Sixth Avenue.
I am Vincent in the wheat field.
I am Arnold, winning Mr. Olympia yet again.
I am Henry Miller, fingering in Clichy, scribbling in Brooklyn.
I am Dy Thomas, blowing a fag end into a BBC mike.
I am a spotty fourteen-year-old with a meager moustache.
I am a bloated middle-aged bald man.
I am a corpse.
I am Chas Eames.
I am Dick Feynman.
I am Wally Whitman.
---
Last night I was thinking about how hard it is to stay in my own skin. Maybe that's the way art is supposed to make you feel, to catapult you into another aspect of yourself and let you dwell there a while. Or maybe that's just what it is to be human and to try to live an examined life.
I'm reacting intensely to all of the things I am going through right now, all of the different audiences I seem to be strutting past. I want to' be me', to express that me-ness, and yet it is so varied, so contradictory. There's me as husband, father, son, and brother. Illustrator, author, blogger, copywriter, professional, and novice. Teacher, student, know-it-all, and idiot. Ad guy, art-guy, ugly American guy, and Registered Alien. Jew, Christian, Buddhist, and atheist. Hermit, tireless self-promoter, success, and failure.
It's not really that I'm seeking the answer any more. My adolescence is so far behind me, and I have worn out my allotment of mid-life crises. It's more that I'm perpetually restless, only temporarily satisfied with every conclusion.
Perhaps this is the biological imperative that moves successful organisms towards adaptation and evolution. Those who are content to keep chowing down on a certain kind of leaf or to hang out by a certain waterhole are secure ... until the shit comes down. Then it's only those shifty, scuttling rodents in the undergrowth that make it to the next level. We are the descendants of every successful shape shifter there's been till now, the freakiest of all mutated freaks, and these days, as the shit comes down more heavily than ever, only the unsatisfiable will survive. So perhaps I'm working my way up to missing linkhood.
Or maybe I'll just be the first lemming off the cliff.
Or worse yet, somewhere lost in the middle of the herd.

Comments

Oh wonderful Danny...

You are so far from the middle of the herd.

The middle however, at least from a Taoist perspective, is the best seat in the house.

Open to everything.

Attached to nothing.

Easy for me to say, I struggle like a fish out of water with who I am on a daily basis.

Who Am I?

Beats me.

Here are a few quotes from a couple of wise guys.

To be selfless is to be all-pervading.
To be all pervading is to be transcendent.

--Lao Tzu

The perfect man has no self, because he has transcended the finite and identified himself with the Universe

--Chuang Tzu

When I am feeling down, I go to the Tzu.

Keep on wondering.

Your pal no matter who you are,

--Donavan

(AKA- The Artist Formerly Known As Baby Boy)


If you haven't read it (and it's likely you already have) may I strongly recommend Alan Watts' "The Book: On the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are." It is on my top 10 all time list. Your post prompts me that it's time for me to lose my alleged self in it again.

I think it's rather good not to be always content. I also think that many of us have several sides, often contradictory.

Although you might be in the middle of the herd, you'll never be lost..too many people know who you are and where you've been going!!
And they keep saying.."Hmm..I like what he's doing..maybe I'll moooooove in that sort of direction right now?"

(I have a side that likes lame, corny jokes)

I've read this a few times and really want to leave a comment but when I get here all I have inside me is a big cheer so...

HURRAH!!

(Middle of the herd? On yer bike! First over the cliff? Only if your head's buried in your sketchbook...)

*sinks back into her chair*
wow, i'm not the only one, then?!
blessings to ya x

About the photo:
It's a picture I took at the Hare Krishna festival in Washington Square Park last weekend. They set up this diorama every year, to remind us of how our flesh changes while our souls live on through each incarnation. They're plaster and a little fucked up but their karma persists.

Wow..just knowing that brings a whole new demension to it. I didn't quite understand the scene before. It's actually pretty profound, even if some of them are a little wonky-looking. Thanks!

get out of my head, Danny! There are already too many people in here. :D