Wednesday, November 14, 2012

You Will Leave (excerpt)

This is an excerpt from a short story, You Will Leave, that may appear in an upcoming book I'm working on, tentatively titled Situations of I.  

Sorry I haven't been here lately.  Busy.  

*


A boy finds a bottle on a beach.  The surf washes its cadence into the shore and interacts with itself, grinding shells and flotsam in eternal repetitive movements.
A bottle.  An empty Pepsi bottle.  He picks it up from the sand.  Contentment flows through him.  He squats and sets the bottle upright on the damp sand just beyond the waterline.  A handful of sand, held over the lid, lets granules sift onto the rounded top and cascade down the sides in a musical shushing hollow sound.
First sand fills the bottle, then is poured out to form a pile.  Again..  Again..  The pile grows. 
Later, small shells alone fill the bottom portion of the plastic cylindrical container.
The boy holds one hand on top of the bottle and shakes it.  This, and the resulting sound, go on for some time. 

Saturday, May 26, 2012

The Writer or The Gazebo


05/18/2012 




Is a story action and adventure?  Activity?

We fight.  Mainly to kill each other over what we want.

But a cemetery is so calm.  Grass grows over a memorial granite stone and birds sing in a wood surrounding a quiet sun-dappled clearing featuring an ornate eight-sided gazebo which is lighted at night.

Stately firs, oaks and maples stand sentry in this pleasant-looking glade.  A high-ceilinged, gable-roofed, single-level library rests on a hillside opposite the wooded gazebo background.

Ants toil in their nests below volcano-like mounds in the mortar cracks around the octagonal stone set in the center of the gazebo.  This writer walks to the steps leading down, stepping over different-sized black ants to squat down to read the date on the memorial stone.  Sept. 30, 1979.  A couple had paid to build the gazebo, it seemed.  The writer wondered if they lived yet.

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Born to Wonder


This is from a friend who ordered my book when it first came out.  I told her a few days ago in an email that I hadn’t sold a million copies yet and she replied:

“It is a rather large book Dave.
What is your main objective in writing it? For you own benefit, as a road map for others, as a teaching tool on spiritual ways and means??”



My answer (what I actually wrote to my friend is different) might have been:

I don’t think I’ll prune any more branches from my epitaph.  I haven't found many people to relate to in this life, but I have found them.  This book is for them.  My mind is an unusual tree, but it’s me.

Portrait’s title is as close a description of what this book is about as I can make it: a portrayal of a person who was born to seek life’s meaning. 

A portrait is not any single blob of paint.  So my book is all of the things you mentioned; it is for my own benefit, of course, as well as a roadmap for others and a “teaching tool” on spiritual ways and means.

I don't think people need others like they think they do.  Many people seem to need an example.  Monkey see, monkey do.  When we finally see something that matches us...

I wanted to show how I was inspired to follow the beat of my own drum and to offer encouragement to others who are seeking their own ultimate answer.

Portrait is absolutely imperfect because it reflects something eternally susceptible to improvement—me.  Yet I think these prints of mine in the snow are at the same time perfect, because they're mine and they tell my story.

If I ever find I want to write something blatantly instructive, I'll put together one or two pages and post it.  I’ll invite anyone to email me and this is what I would invariably say:

This is your life.  None of us matter in the end to you, and none of us are right about your life, but you.  I know an answer exists for me; and because this is true for me, I suspect it is possible for you.  I hope that you will try to find out.

I wanted to make Portrait a reality while I could; too many years had gone by with just the idea of this book bobbing around in the back of my head.  I know that most books, like the proverbial captain, go down with their ship.  Steer your own boat.

I think certain people will read Portrait.

Friday, April 20, 2012

Under the Surface, Shining On













I saw my friend in the wind-gentled sun’s reflection of the river as I sat on the concrete pier.

A goose honked from a creek’s mouth downstream. 
I watched it fly, briefly, while poisoning myself with my next breath. 
Finding this paper in my wallet, I started to write my eulogy.

Are you in the sky, or down there, I thought. 
I knew the answer. 
Hello, I thought to my friend, whose final battle with life I’d been honored enough to witness. 
He was so calm.  So shocked into silence.

“No Swimming and No Alcohol,” said a sign facing the water from a banded-together stand of treated timber. 
Bill swam and drank—a lot. 
I imagined the days of his years on a boat in the waves.

In the pages of his final chapter, he sequestered himself in his block house second floor apartment to “find Ultimate Truth,” he said. 
You never could tell if he was joking;
his amused expression never told you the truth. 

“I found Ultimate Truth in January,” he said, “while under anesthesia for my broken ankle.”

“Well,” I asked, “what is it?”

“I can’t tell you,” he said.  “You have to find it out for yourself.” 

I pause in writing this. 
A passing fishing boat has sent rows of waves toward me, rocking Bill’s reflection, dividing it into many. 
The wind picks up, then slacks. 
Bill’s shining light coalesces back into a single place on the calming surface of the water.

My page is filled. 
I will read this to other friends, I think,
but first, I will poison myself one more time… for Bill; for me. 

Goodbye.

He’s smiling down there, in the bubbles. 
And shining.

Meeting of the Minds (M&M) Philosophy group regular, William R. Gates, 67, of Moundsville, West Virginia, has graduated from the school of life.  He attended our Tuesday evening meetings during these past six years at the Ohio County Public Library in Wheeling.  He is a friend, and honored us—those of us who remain—by dying a week ago on Tuesday.  I imagine that he made his exit while we watched and discussed another friend’s recent documentary, Meetings with Remarkable Women in the “board room” meeting place in the library’s basement.
I wish we had known.
I wrote this eulogy exactly where I said I did, at Heritage Port, in Wheeling, the same afternoon I’d heard of his departure.  I haven’t changed it.  That day, I went down to the water and burned tobacco in remembrance of Bill.  He’d told me once of years he’d spent in Southern Florida on a boat.  Bill has a talent for unbelievable tales and always seems mildly amused by something.
Down at the river last Tuesday, I wondered about him, and where he might be now that he’s gone—then I looked down at the sun shining up from the surface of the river in front of my dangling feet.  There.  Here.
Later, three of us regulars ended up our meeting early, drove to the river at sunset and raised our makeshift glasses to a departed friend on the path.
Farewell, Bill.

Thursday, February 23, 2012

YES, VIRGINIA. ELVIS IS IN THE HOUSE.


Portrait of a Seeker: Born to Wonder (by the author of this blog) is in bookstores as you read.  Over the next several weeks, it will be listed in catalogs and you will be able to order Portrait from any brick and mortar or online book seller in the English speaking world and beyond.


From Portrait of a Seeker's Amazon description:

“I painted this sandcastle in one long summer day because I’ve watched other ‘books,’ unwritten and unread, falling into holes and thought, ‘What a shame—no one will ever know what they knew.’”
The author of Portrait of a Seeker writes about the meaning of life and thinks he found it. He has a view that he wants to share: “I believe every self-aware creature should be allowed to find its place.”
In Portrait you will find short stories, poetry, journal entries, correspondence with others seeking meaning, accounts of living in America and overseas, anecdotes of idealistic undertakings and a unique love story. This book is an impression left in the soft mud of existence. A million years from now, Weimer muses, an archeologist might uncover its fossilized, unreadable form and wonder briefly...




I want to thank you for your patience these past few years.  Now that it's done, I will no longer post excerpts from Portrait as a book-in-the-works.  I'm working  currently on my second short story in an upcoming collection called Beyond Still.


Note: Soon you'll be able to "Look Inside" when you check out Portrait's listing on Amazon.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Portrait of a Seeker -- arriving soon, at an online bookseller near you!

This is the cover of my book, Portrait of a Seeker: Born to Wonder.  As soon as I do a final "Eproof" with the printer, One and Only Press will be announcing the release of its first book.  At long last.