I find things. These are not commonly the things I am looking for or the things I have lost. Many hours I have engaged over the decades searching for the plane I moments ago set down amid the clutter of the workplace and which then no longer was visible to me. Frequently during such frustrating hunts I have accused my partner of having stolen the tool. Occasionally I might have blamed a customer. In every instance it has appeared in the spot I set it. Just a few weeks ago I bought a new nail set to replace the one I could not find, the original surfacing some days later in the left, rather than the accustomed right pocket of my tool belt.
My whole life I have sought deep enduring love. This expedition has suffered some derailments. I have tried to secure variously from several sources understanding, operating room, forgiveness, affection, relief, or assistance. As I suspect with most persons in most lives, I have found some of these some of the time. I have not discovered financial security and see no evidence that this sad series of surreal essays is advancing me toward that goal.
One of the inestimable, astonishing pleasures of being part of a family is having someone to take each discovery to and by sharing it amplify its pleasures. Often did I run from some pruning or planting job in the pasture to pull my wife from her scullery duties into the light and air, thus to see a great flock of snow buntings operating over our land or a moose ambling up the driveway or a row of bluebirds arrived on our wire. I introduced my son to ancient Limulus polyphemus, the horseshoe crab.
Once I opened my hands to reveal a scarlet tanager momentarily dazed by its collision with the hard sky of our dining room window (the more miraculous, considering the usual filthiness of our glass, that it could even manage a reflection). "How did you get it?" my daughter asked. "I snatched it lightly from the bright sky," I lied, the bird and the experience no less marvelous for my transparent subterfuge.
Last weekend I took my grandson to see his first movie, a disappointment for me, but for him one in a continuing series of new experiences. Hollywood cannot and never has improved upon any book. It can only reduce, cheapen, distort or commercialize, no less the works of Dr. Seuss than any author. But as I arrived home and stepped out of the truck my life crossed the path of the first woolly bear caterpillar of 2008 as it humped across the damp driveway gravel of a chilly Maine evening. It instantly reminded me of the innumerable numbers of its species I had encountered crossing the warmed surface of Route Twenty, the Cherry Valley Turnpike, on the twenty-first of September, 1968, as I hitch-hiked from Albany to Cortland to be for a weekend in the company of the young woman who, all these years later, would find herself grandmother of the toddler home with tales of theater seats that he was too light to hold down.
I find writers and songwriters whose works do not make bestseller or top forty lists and are not championed by Oprah Winfree or talked over in community book circles. These books and records accumulate in my mind and heart as surely as on my shelves. I find them again and again as a line or a lyric surges to the conscious level to illuminate the experience of daily life, to give me support as I throw a couplet toward a bored town meeting (last week I gave them Warren Zevon-"Mr. Bad Example"), or to annoy my wife or children as I took time from the behavior correction they were trying to implant in me to offer them Blind Willie McTell or Black 47 or Van Morrison, "making love in the green grass behind the stadium", his "inarticulate speech of the heart" having amplified the beat of my own.
So let me today present to those who have ridden with me over so many miles and through so many convoluted turns and across so many painful pointless metaphors this thing I found last week, I remember not where. I might have read it; I might have heard it on the radio. It says exactly what I have been trying to synthesize out of the triumph and ruin of my own life as I have put my thoughts before you here for these ten years. You will feel when you read this one sentence how far short of its pellucid perfection all this prologue has fallen. Read this, on life and life only, from the great playwright Tennessee Williams:
A high station in life is earned by the gallantry with which appalling experiences are survived with grace.
Just so: one sentence, eighteen words. Write it on an index card and tape it to your computer or your refrigerator door. Keep a copy in your wallet. Send it to everyone on your E-mail list. Paint it on a slate or shingle and hang it in the garden. Somebody turn on Oprah and Doctor Phil and Charlie Rose to this sentence, this idea, this revelation. All we need to know about living the good life is contained herein.
Barack Obama, the radio interpreter tells me, says there is one America; Hillary Clinton says there are many Americas. He is a uniter; she caters to the needs and wants of several fragmented constituencies. John McCain says there is the United States of America and there are its enemies. You doubtless have your own system for ordering humanity. There is us and them, the familiar and the other. Black and white, rich and poor, ambitious and lazy, sane and crazy, saved and sinner. We hang together or we hang separately. The web of life; the chain of being. Great themes and small, noble and petty, every scheme suffices for those who find comfort or confirmation in their positions on the balance.
But here's what I like about this simple statement from old gay, depressed, drunken, dead Thomas Lanier Williams III. It establishes no simple dichotomy, no either-or. One is not boy or man, sheep or goat, winner or loser, great or small. Four criteria must be met to achieve high station, to be worthy of the respect we accord only great human beings. There is no roadmap to success, no do this and this will happen. And no sane person would likely choose the life described.
First, you must be subjected to appalling experiences. These may one supposes be physical or mental. They may occur naturally but are more often, I suspect, imposed or exacerbated by other, lesser members of our own species.
Then, you must survive these circumstances. There is implicit, I think, the understanding that you are complicit in your own survival, that it is not enough to lie passively waiting for a savior to rise from the streets, but I could be wrong about that. Quite possibly, when the horror of a life is total and unrelenting we have no burden other than to not die, not succumb.
You must survive with grace. You must do so gallantly. How archaic these terms seem to us in our modern world. There is little grace or gallantry in commerce or politics and not much in art.
I know some persons who meet these criteria. Only a few. They have endured that which you have not, will not, could not. But many have endured much and been spurred on only to getting back, getting even, getting ahead. To survive poverty only to become wealthy is no evidence of character. To endure a beating and then to become strong enough to beat down one's former oppressor is understandable but not noble behavior. We have more than enough billionaires and strongmen; we do not need to recruit more from the ranks of the poor and oppressed.
But if you can live through what the fortunate consider unendurable or unthinkable, come out of it intact, human, humane, empathic, and understanding and forgiving of yourself, your fellow sufferers and to some degree even those failed human beings who held you down or savaged your body or soul, you may earn that higher station.
We fret and agitate ourselves about "the terrorists" of our world. We should look to our neighbors and our friends and our nation and our nation's allies, any number of whom have suffered great wrongs. Most will have survived. But how many of us and of them came through intact, whole, decent? When they break up a dog fighting ring, most of the animals are so emotionally ruined they must be laid away. It is a rare dog that comes through all the terrible days and worse nights of his savage life without turning irrevocably mean.
I don't wish any man or woman a hard life. But every person needs enough hard-earned wisdom to inform and infuse his journey: A high station in life is earned by the gallantry with which appalling experiences are survived with grace.
Some will argue that Mr. Cooper is himself an appalling experience. Whatever station he has earned or might yet attain, everything he brings to his readers he has found as he has lurched and stumbled through his own life. He will be gratified if some scraps of this lore, some of these objects, a few insights hard earned may help illuminate or elevate the paths of some others. The last of the snow is finally fading from the Alna, Maine landscape, and not wishing to be disturbed as he takes again to his woods and fields he will not give you his cell phone number, but you may reach him in the dark of night at ckc2@prexar.com. He assures readers he studies and appreciates every message he receives, and apologizes that he often falls asleep at his desk at the end of a hard-earned day before answering all.
This article was originally published in The Wiscasset Newspaper (Wiscasset, Maine)
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44 Comments so far
Show AllI love the quote and I did cut and paste so I could reflect on it again. I also enjoy reading the comments; sometimes I find them as entertaining and informative as the article itself. Nature is my Cathedral; where I seek and find solace. Really enjoyed reading about nature connections. Also, as far as Obama knowing what appalling situations are... my husband was watching one of those talking heads shows on tv and there they were -in 2008- talking about what a "good dancer" Obama is. It sounded sooo racist I was appalled. I think Obama Hussein knows what it is like to be judged by his skin and not by the content of his character. He could make a great leader and he demonstrates much grace in his manner of speaking.
sphne April 13th, 2008 12:18 am … … … … What a load of crap.CRAP is as CRAP speaks Namaste
Horselover Fat is exactly correct.
kara.korum surely has the right to condemn McCain after all kara.korum's time spent as a prisoner of war and torture. All the time spent serving our country.
This type of comment from an inexpierenced fool is beneath contempt. I'd never vote for McCain, but I certainly respect his experience and service.
As to the Obama statements.....
If you have read "Black Liberation Theology," watched Wright in more than a few of the clips out there, read his columns before they washed the church website, you could hardly fail to recognize bigotry, hate, racism, white bashing and anti-Americanism.
If you listened to Obama's "bitter" comment you can't fail to catch the inflection, tone and context of what he was saying. There is no mistake in his meaning.
It should give pause to anyone that Senator Obama attended this church for 20 years and exposed his children to it. That he apparently does hold an overlord view of average Americans. That there are apparently a few less than main stream connections back in Chicago.
Though I was torn between Obama and Hillary till yesterday, I support Hillary from here forward. We simply will not win with this guy. He would be torn to pieces and exposed in a general elaction.
What a load of crap.
DOOM & GLOOM: Thank you for your 10:51 posting. Lovely. When I was a child I used to bike to a woods near my home. Occasionally I would invite another child and explain that we were among, "Great, Great, Grandfather tree." I tried to explain that the trees talked to me, but I knew it wasn't in a spoken way. Years later I returned to that area for a reunion and a boy teased me about "talking to trees," but by then, it was popular to talk to your plants so they'd grow bigger, and Geller was bending spoons with his mind.
I believe in reincarnation and this part of me that has such a mystical connection with nature I attribute to prior lifetimes as an American Indigenous native.
Jacob Freeze (April 11th, 2008 10:16 am) wrote: "This is ludicrous in the middle of an endorsement for Obama, a prep school kid from Hawaii who waltzed through Columbia and Harvard on scholarships.
"Exactly which 'appalling experiences' did Obama suffer while he was living quietly with his white middle-class grand-parents, or on Ivy League campuses? Or was it during his life as a well-paid lawyer in Chicago with an even better-paid wife?"
Once again, you miss the point, Mr. Freeze. It doesn't matter that Obama worked hard to earn those scholarships through good grades and 'waltz' through college, unlike the current occupant of the White House who was a 'legacy'; and it doesn't matter that he was ostracized as a young man, by both whites and blacks, for not being enough of either race; and it doesn't matter that he was pulling down a 'fortune' organizing unemployed steelworkers on Chicago's South Side, before he married his wife.
What really matters, and you neglected to point out, was that Obama ordered orange juice instead of coffee in a diner; that he was suspected of sneaking a cigarette by Jake Tapper of ABC News; that he has bowling score of 37; that he stills attends the same church he's been going to for 20 years even though he occasionally disagrees with his pastor; and that he recently stated that people in small towns are often driven to extremes in thought by distressed economic circumstances, obviously proving he is an 'elitist' and therefore unelectable. I'm surprised you ignored such fundamental character flaws on Obama's part -- a thoughtful, perspicacious bigot would never have missed them.
Tennessee Williams, like T. Texas Tyler, and U. Utah Phillips, sure could turn a phrase. So can Chris Cooper.
The ancient trees and the old familiar stones are the Elders of the Elders. Within them rests wise old spirits deserving of our respect. If you are seeking strength seek out the old oak. If you are seeking grace find a river birch. The old stones carry the wisdom of the ages. The East direction is the sacred direction to my people. I approach an old grandfather tree from the East and ask permission to come closer and to touch. I offer tobacco to the old tree as a sign of respect. Then placing my hand on the tree we enter the world of spirit. It is there that we find communion of spirit and understanding. Love and wisdom are enhanced by sharing the gift of life. This is a simple transitional moment in time lived as life is meant to be, in communion with all of nature.
Daniel David April 12th, 2008 9:28 am
"As for lobo gris above stating that I have some goal to eliminate the legal consumption of alcohol, he (or she) regularly lies about me and my posts all the time. My position about the proper legality of alcohol was clearly posted above—then lied about again by lobo gris. Nothing new here. This person says and does little else at CD."
I lie about you DD?
Below are your own words.
"Daniel David April 11th, 2008 10:05 am
Many people today are homeless, in prison, divorced, and even dead because they drank too much of the beer that John and Cindy McCain distributed all over the place for 25 years.
Daniel David April 11th, 2008 2:52 pm
USAn,
I have no misconceptions at all about alcohol. Even though my brother died of alcoholism, I am aware that there are some cited health benefits of drinking small amounts at a time. I do so occasionally, have never had a problem with it, don't criticize others for doing likewise, and I am not "preaching" against beer as though I think we should go back to the failed prohibition era.
Even though you and I can perhaps biologically tolerate a little alcohol, it DOES result in the destruction of many other peoples' lives. People who will profiteer off that business, mass wholesale to boot– knowing that some fraction of the customers (alcoholics) cannot stop drinking and some other non-participants will be victims of car wrecks, drunken rages of abuse, family breakups and more
ARE NOT MODELS OF LEADERSHP. And they're not "gallant".
No way. No how. If they were, they would have turned their back on the idea of marketing misfortune to others"
Lobo Gris
matti,
I do agree with you that there is some risk of a few guys you described as Joe Sixpack types giving their votes to John McCain precisely because they already identify themselves with beer and partying and therefore see McCain as a soul mate. I don't, however, believe that group is a larger bloc than the serious church folks who will turn their vote away from McCain if they know about the magnitude of his beer business.
You're not the first person who has accused me of parroting something from the Obama camp or the official Democrats. Only problem is, it ain't so. First of all, I don't know or have contact with anyone working for Obama--or in the Democratic Party either. Secondly, I am not aware that the Obama campaign itself has ever mentioned the beer issue concerning McCain, and frankly, I don't expect them to do so. Some topics are only appropriate to be raised by independent citizens--and that's what I'm doing. I really don't have any DEM "masters" that you and others imagine.
As for lobo gris above stating that I have some goal to eliminate the legal consumption of alcohol, he (or she) regularly lies about me and my posts all the time. My position about the proper legality of alcohol was clearly posted above---then lied about again by lobo gris. Nothing new here. This person says and does little else at CD.
I love the article. Reminded me a lot of my own muddle through life.
As for our three presidential candidates - any one of them may do a terrific job - if their choices for all the other positions around them are good ones. We can't see into their hearts and minds to know what kind of president they'll become. If I judge them by what I've seen just looking at them, all are worthy of the job they've applied for. What I "saw" the first time I gazed upon the face of G.W. Bush when he became a candidate for this office, and the title that came into my mind at that time has been proven out. It's because I've had this "seeing" the true being behind a face four times in my life, and all four seeings proved true, that I think these three are okay. Of course I don't want McCain because of the judges thing, and Social Security.
As for the differences among us, we are all ONE, and like snowflakes, no two are alike.
matti April 11th, 2008 5:48 pm
"Just a quick word of advice to -Daniel David-:
I suspect you have good intentions, but the whole "beer business bad" line is a non-starter."
DD is trying to have it both ways. It's OK to drink alcoholic beverages according to him but those that distribute it are bad. The actual goal being to eliminate the legal consumption of alcoholic beverages.
Much the same as what B. Clinton tried to do with guns in the nineties. He knew he couldn't get the 2nd amendment repealed and tried to do an end run around it by suing the gun manufacturers out of business. IE. It's OK to own a gun but the gun manufacturers are bad.
Lobo Gris
"Relating this to the presidential election (which IS of paramount importance to citizens every time), I guess we'd have to conclude that McCain most "deserves" to be POTUS, because he survived the appalling experience of being a POW and emerged with grace."
Except, Daniel, that he hasn't emerged with grace, in my opinion. He emerged very much with a divided soul, an us v them way of making sense of the world. A man who can sing with pleasure about bombing a country full of men, women, and children who mean no harm, is graceless.
"I disagree with the main statement. I think it should be worded as:
"A high station in life is earned by the way you treat others and the good you provide to the world." "
Not to argue too much, Lorax, but I'll guess that is what Williams meant by "gallantry".
"And all truly on-the-wagon alchoholics have no trouble being around people serving drinks"
Some terrific people in recovery do have exactly this trouble, USAn, and do in fact avoid precisely these kinds of situations.
"Some get it, some don't, and that, I expect, is exactly what Chris expects. And, then there are a few of us who get it sometimes and sometimes not, the empasis here has to go to the effort of trying to get the biggest picture, the attempt is the bottom line. Thanks, Chris."
Thanks indeed to Chris, and to you, annabelle, for you thoughtful comment.
I believe Christ would be the first to say "Judge not, lest ye be judged". And I understand his words to mean that as you judge others, so you judge yourself. We are as harsh in our self criticism as we are to others, and I believe that is what he was really talking about. We can't love ourselves if we're judging ourselves and we can't love others if we don't love ourselves. I would not dream of measuring another's life experiences as I see them and judging whether or not their experience was appalling. That is not for me to know. I believe the term is hate the sin but love the sinner. I don't have to approve or accept someone's behavior, but that doesn't make the person their behavior. And that goes for some people on this thread.
kathyodat
Vietnam has provided a good example of character. They seem to hold no animosity to Americans. The Palestinians, angry as they are ,are nonetheless willing to live with Israel from various posts I have seen. The Israelis, on the other hand, have taken their bad experience and used it to become monsters. The Us hasn't suffered so it should just shut up. Enduring 7 years of Bush is not the same as being bombed with 1 million killed. Being taunted in school or enduring your husband's infidelity is not a biggie either.
I agree that the article is more about humanity collectively and only touches on politics slightly and briefly.
Tennessee Williams had a good point with his observation;
"A high station in life is earned by the gallantry with which appalling experiences are survived with grace." ....but I agree with mariposavisions opinion that appalling experiences can be about perception as well as the true horrors that many have endured in life, and I will go a step further with a belief that "a high station in life" (as most Americans would define it) isn't all that important in the scheme of things.
excerpt from;
DESIDERATA
By Max Ehrmann (1872-1945)
Go placidly amid the noise and haste,
And remember what peace there may be in silence.
As far as possible without surrender
be on good terms with all persons.
Speak your truth quietly & clearly;
and listen to others,
even the dull & ignorant;
they too have their story.........
http://www.tentmaker.org/tracts/Desiderata.html
'Appalling' experiences (adversity and/or pain) cannot be simplified to a media-defined horror episode...however far you want to envision T. Williams' quote. We all reflect diversity and respect in our individual experiences. Let's just agree that pain is pain, however it is felt, however it is defined. And it is felt by most everyone.
Cooper moves in like a poet addressing what we ALL face in our lives.
'Surviving appalling' experiences might be; our breakups or fights with loved ones or family, self-defeating thoughts, never-ending focus on apathy, stress, taking care of details & the fallout...lethargy, etc. etc.
And to those expounding theories about racial/bi-racial/cultural struggle, pain and/or non-pain...I'll just share the following experience to add to the 'diverse mix'.
I clearly remember how much I cried when friends I had loved throughout elementary school made fun of who I was -at the core. Innocent in their world but still, their harsh words and laughing at my mother's broken English skills felt to me, well, appalling. My mother's voice was just that..'mom' to me (the woman I loved and sought comfort from). I eventually kept some friends, others fell to the wayside but those instances were NOT uncommon throughout my life. They still occur but nowadays I find a language and quiet, forgiving strength that inherently is all about grace.
Just remember 'grace' can take root in ALL our lives. Thank you Chris. Poetic and 'straight to my heart...like a cannonball' -- Van the Man!
i, too, found this an enjoying read.
and i was also surprised at the ratio of posts concerning the upcoming elections- particularly disparaging obama. where did this come from? if that was all you got from this essay then surely you read it only superficially. there were no endorsements, no overtly political statements. the author's brief reference to the electoral candidates was clearly to emphasize a point about perceptions.
this story was a statement about character, experience and perseverance, and to reduce it, once again, to a myopic debate about how much of a spoiled sell-out obama is betrays a bias that prevents a thorough understanding of any philosophical issue.
TheLorax April 11th, 2008 10:23 am
I disagree with the main statement. I think it should be worded as:
"A high station in life is earned by the way you treat others and the good you
provide to the world."
hey lorax, i think you make a good point. Yet to get to this point, you have to survive
adversity first and hopefully, do it with grace.
Just a quick word of advice to -Daniel David-:
I suspect you have good intentions, but the whole "beer business bad" line is a non-starter.
Do you see how constantly pointing out McCain's connections to the beer industry not only don't paint him as evil or irresponsible, but actually work in his favor by associating his name with beer -the essential nectar of many an average joe SIX-PACK's worldview- and making the Obamaniacs appear not only sneaky and low, but also elitist and anti-"freedom"?
Please cease employing this tactic forthwith, and inform your friends (masters?) in the Obama '08 campaign to do the same.
For Obama's own good and the good of the Democratic Party.
Now I'll re-read the Article and try to absorb it this time -anybody else find this dude's righting style a bit difficult?
-matti.
This was beautifully done. Thank you for your eloquent observations, Chris.
I never took this to be a political endorsement piece for any candidate. Surely all of them have faced appalling circumstances and have met them with grace.
Sen. Clinton survived with dignity the huge and very public embarassment of the Lewinski affair. Sen. McCain's story is well known: he survived gallantly those appalling circumstances of his six-year POW imprisonment. And Obama grew up as a black kid with a white mother and an absent black father, raised by white grandparents. Not exactly the Nelsons or the Cleavers, but he went on to become an attorney and advocate for the poor. All three have their stories of gallantry, as old-fashioned as that may sound.
But I don't believe this piece is about any of them, but all of us. Hopefully we will all rise above the indignities of the last 7 years, and survive with Cooper's grace and gallantry, rather than lose our souls to the anger and resentfulness that will never empower us.
Kudos, again, Mr. Cooper.
It's sort of touching how many emails I get about my comments on CommonDreams. Lawrence Freitas writes...
"So Obama never has had it tough? Excuse me, but being Obama is a person of mixed racial extraction, I imagine he has encountered over the years many people calling him names and offering barbs that he has had to suffer through. A preppy lawyer? What of Bush..." And then we're off on how Bush is even luckier than Obama.
Harharharhar!!!
Maybe it escaped the perspicuity of Mr. Freitas, but Barack Obama wasn't even born in the era of Jim Crow, and if life at an exclusive prep school in Hawaii in the Seventies counts as the sort "appalling experience" described in this article, I wish I had more like it.
I can imagine someone introducing Lawrence Freitas to a black friend, and the first thing Mr. Freitas says is...
"Oh, how appalling it must be to be you!"
Ah Chris, what a joy you are to a fellow old man. Fellow fans will be pleased to learn I listed him (http://www.blognow.com.au/mrpickwick/83332/The_worst_of_times_the_best.h...) as one of the 39 things we should show the first Martian visitor to our planet as proof of what human civilisation is capable of.
Only the virtuous man acts well in good fortune.
Aristotle 'Ethecs' Book IV
I hope that we shall all 'act well' after the next election.
GOAT GIRL: Inspired post. Imagine if together we built a world where war (that leads to inevitable suffering, so that the "Sins of the fathers" are guaranteed to return to the next generation, as sons) was not the main event, and the inspired, creative side of human nature instead could be free to bloom. Imagine what people no longer trapped by the marks of suffering could do! I live to imagine that world for my children's children, or perhaps theirs.
Whilst many in this world...too too many in fact, suffer much more appalling circumstances than I, I know also that all of us DO suffer
things that, in context of our lives, feel or seem appalling enough to rock us on our heels and send us spiralling down one rabbit hole of fear and doubt and pain or another.
No matter the degree, no matter the cause of suffering I know that grace and gallantry are rare to find within ourselves and perhaps even within those we know well...but the world is full of the grace and gallantry of it's suffering people, masses of whom display everyday grace and gallanty when faced with appalling circumstances to which they and their bretheren
are subjected day in and day out, generation upon genration.
That all who suffer and struggle so do not rise each day to kill or torture one more oppressor, but strive only to live another day is proof of this.
Well written essay.....
Daniel,
I think in the context of this article...wisdom is learned from experience...
In McCains case...he had the experience, but learned nothing from it...
T.Williams lived in Key West and had a lovely home there. I met his cousin, Stell Adams, who was a palm reader. One year she handed me a tape of his unpublished (read) poems and I believe I lost it! (So many travels!)
CEE MIRACLES: Heartfelt posting. My life seems to parallel yours. I, too, find solace in nature these days. The drumbeat of Mars is so fierce in our land, felt in the pounding boom boxes, the unceasing motor-driven cars and worse still, lawn machines, that rob the mind of the silence in which reflection can bloom into genuine harvest.
STARISLAN: I believe you're confusing genetics, a thing of biology, with character, a "thing" of the soul, its essence not especially contained, nor defined by genetics.
Chris Cooper: In my humble opinon, this was your most moving, poetic essay to date. It truly stirred my spirit... it seems persons who come from very violent damaged homes either become abusers themselves, or caretakers; but rare is the person who can fully transcend the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune. You have come upon a wonder, and rendered its revelation with exceptional literary skill. To me genius is the blend of heart and mind, and this essay fulfills that objective. Bravo!
USAn,
I have no misconceptions at all about alcohol. Even though my brother died of alcoholism, I am aware that there are some cited health benefits of drinking small amounts at a time. I do so occasionally, have never had a problem with it, don't criticize others for doing likewise, and I am not "preaching" against beer as though I think we should go back to the failed prohibition era.
But many of these articles are about leadership, this one about earning a high station in life with gallantry. The election is about choosing a "good" leader for the whole country and free world. John McCain by his own marriage-interest business actions IS NOT SUITABLE AS A GOOD LEADER and neither is his wife, Cindy, to serve as first lady. If we can't do better than those two, we are guilty of being nationally deaf and blind to the needs of the world (a tendency of Republicans anyway, so look at what the heck they're nominating this time.)
Even though you and I can perhaps biologically tolerate a little alcohol, it DOES result in the destruction of many other peoples' lives. People who will profiteer off that business, mass wholesale to boot-- knowing that some fraction of the customers (alcoholics) cannot stop drinking and some other non-participants will be victims of car wrecks, drunken rages of abuse, family breakups and more
ARE NOT MODELS OF LEADERSHP. And they're not "gallant".
No way. No how. If they were, they would have turned their back on the idea of marketing misfortune to others.
Blessed be the CD gods for giving us a double dose of Cooperism in less than a fortnight.
His quote by Tennesee Williams is uplifting and an important life lesson. Especially to those who have experienced the appalling and who know that they will again. I'll be gallant and not resppond to some of the babbling none sense a few of you out there can't seem to get past.
"A high station in life is earned by the gallantry with which appalling experiences are survived with grace."
AND SOMETHING ELSE INSIDE THAT ALLOWS FOR THAT GRACE ... I just wrote the below this morning in answer to a Board post by a cohort about a sense of isolation and disconnection in these times, and I think it applies to what Chris Cooper speaks of [modified just a little bit]:
+++++++
I just saw "The Matrix" for the first time. And the message of course is clear: that the
"Reality" we live in is created from our own
perceptions. And when we get brainwashed enough ... and that begins the moment we are
delivered into the world and draw our first breath after a doctor has grabbed us by our
tiny ankles and feet, flipped us upside down
and smacked our little asses a few times [unless a gentler technique is used of
delivery into warm water and/or stroking firmly, but gently, to clear the fluids from
the lungs and nasal passages],... we are programmed to perceive the "normal" world of
our families, our cultures, our nations ...
whatever ... as "normal."
See how "normal" -- translate good -- we are
and how weird and dangerous those others are!
In this truly peculiar life I have lived with its incredible contrasts from glitz,
performance, NYC crowds, scholarly pursuits,
various husbands & lovers & the varied life-styles of their kith and kin, so
many deaths to handle hands-on, births and children, and so much hands-on care-giving,
shifts in environment and rich to
below-the-poverty-line living, ... and my own addictions and dependencies (co- or otherwise)
... and kicking the habits [not all
certainly] ... and the digging through all of that and seeing patterns and embracing spirit
and whatever ... so much sometimes going on
all at once at various levels and so many changes made in dropping-off-a-cliff-style
kinds of experiences, ... it has been and
is the actual isolation and disconnection and the reconnection to the land and the acute
tuning in to the sounds and sights and tactile
and olfactory sensibilities and the awareness of the seasonal cycles of life with its seeming death phases that always lead to rebirth and renewal that truly define
my perspective and perceptions ...
And sometimes because I embrace life so avidly ... even the depression and downers ... I do
lose my way, but again it is the isolation and
disconnection that brings me back because it is a way of stepping back ... and thus one
listens differently and suddenly hears the chatter that is so crazily programmed and crazily programming ... and unfortunately
internalized as REALITY ... that has brought
us to where we are ... and one sees, hears, knows ... something else is going on.
And so "The Matrix" ends, after all the insane violence, high-tech stuff and bodies as lethal
instruments, with I LOVE YOU and a kiss ...
That's The Real Reality ... LOVE ... and The Great Teachers keep comin' ... all through history ... saying that, living that ...
Oh yeah, Chris Cooper:
"A high station in life is earned by the gallantry with which appalling experiences are survived with grace."
Gandhi: Be Peace ... Be the Change You Want To See ... That's it!
LOVE ONE ANOTHER ... last instruction/command by Jesus ... That's it!
KNOW THYSELF and LOVE THYSELF ... That's it!
... and while you're at it LOVE THY NEIGHBOR, which includes every human being on the planet
and every living thing that exists. You
don't have to like the behavior and sometimes you need to run like hell ... but underneath
all of it is LOVE. That's the REAL REALITY!
Pay attention to the scripts being written by others and announced by the conditioned lackeys ... And look underneath them and past
them ...
That's why studying and understanding the history of humankind is so fascinating and important. It's more than a peek at the same insanities being cooked up, perpetrated and
bought into and expecting a different outcome
each time.
As Einstein said ... in my words:
... That's NUTZ! ... And I plead guilty ... how many times have I done the same thing over
and over expecting a different outcome? Fast
learner of many things; slow learner of other things. But I'm always tryin' ... and
tryin' ... and sometimes it's good to stop trying and just LET IT GO! [the ego/little
self in the gated community ... among other
things] and then really TUNE IN! ... open, free and let 'er rip ...
Ask the right questions of yourself and you'll come up with the right answer ... Be That answer as much as you can be ...
Ultimately the right answer is always based on LOVE. Always ...
And if we get that ... one by one ... that's how we change the world, our own and others',
and solve our problems and etcetera ...
What an ADVENTURE!!! ... Individual as well as collectively ...
That's The Work ... that's what I've always called it [and there's a lady out there now who "teaches" THE WORK in her own style ... www.thework.com ... just a few questions and
a few turn-arounds, and perception changes ...] ... and be prepared ...
"A high station in life is earned by the gallantry with which appalling experiences are survived with grace."
peace ...
How strange to hear the word "graciousness" again to describe a human virtue, in a world that has become more closely aligned with "vengefulness" Mr. Cooper must be a product of that mythical antiquity: a liberal education. Speaking of which I recommend a nice article by Marilynne Robinson in this month's Harpers, titled A Great Amnesia.
It may be that many of us see life itself as not much more than a playing out of a seemingly continual series of 'appalling experiences', and, if so, any survival, with grace, may be truly amazing.
If the gene pool is the collective information contained within a population, 'grace' appears to be not a dominant gene, as it is not that common, and may not be capable of producing the same phenotypic effect, when paired with a dissimilar gene.
It never seems easy to divinely and freely bestowe love and protection upon mankind, considering our history.
Chris Cooper is an addiction which I fondly enable and one with which I refuse to part. If I had two cents to rub together I would move to Maine, just to be able to breathe the same air Chris breathes. His writings impart a sense of reason that indicates an active intelligence spewing out platitudes to remind one to think outside of the box, at least for a little while. Some get it, some don't, and that, I expect, is exactly what Chris expects. And, then there are a few of us who get it sometimes and sometimes not, the empasis here has to go to the effort of trying to get the biggest picture, the attempt is the bottom line. Thanks, Chris.
"A high station in life is earned by the gallantry with which appalling experiences are survived with grace."
Or, as the character Rocky Balboa says: "It's not how many times you get kicked in the balls. It's how many times you get kicked in the balls and keep on fightin'."
Now, back to the important news - "Brittany Spears New Diet Plan!"
"Many people today are homeless, in prison, divorced, and even dead because they drank too much of the beer that John and Cindy McCain distributed all over the place for 25 years."
And many more are dead from drinking sugar-laden junk distributed by teh coca colar corp, or fat laden white junk distributed by your local dairy, or grease and preservative laden products of the Frito-Lay Corporation. In contrast, alcoholic beverages in moderation have been shown to be beneficial to the health.
Mr David, you seem to have a misconception about alchoholism. Alchoholism is a disease, it is not caused by alchoholic bevereges themselves. The vast majority of people drink alchoholic bevereges without problems. And all truly on-the-wagon alchoholics have no trouble being around people serving drinks - they simply say is "no thanks". They most decidedly do not preach against "evil alchohol" like you do.
To say that half of the above comments caught me as being from out of left field would be an understatement. I didn't perceive any political endorsement in Mr. Cooper's article, nor did I find any implication that military service was the appalling experience we should all seek out to survive gracefully.
Beautifully written, Mr. Cooper. True and sound wisdom. Thank you.
i guess the new heroism and gallantry is initiating and winning conflicts in panama, niacaragua and grenada; the new wisdom is that acquired in the solitary cells of the hanoi hilton and being mugged the new rite to manhood.
I am glad to see this thoughtful article that reflects on the human condition, offering us insight into the kind of person we want our candidates to be and the kind of person we might hope to be ourselves. And it does this with dignity and reason. Thank you, Chris Cooper.
I disagree with the main statement. I think it should be worded as:
"A high station in life is earned by the way you treat others and the good you provide to the world."
"Barack Obama, the radio interpreter tells me, says there is one America; Hillary Clinton says there are many Americas. He is a uniter."
Obama is such a "uniter" that we're in the middle of the most divisive campaign in the history of the Democratic Party. But don't blame Obama... not for divisions, not for anything.
"A high station in life is earned by the gallantry with which appalling experiences are survived with grace."
This is ludicrous in the middle of an endorsement for Obama, a prep school kid from Hawaii who waltzed through Columbia and Harvard on scholarships.
Exactly which "appalling experiences" did Obama suffer while he was living quietly with his white middle-class grand-parents, or on Ivy League campuses? Or was it during his life as a well-paid lawyer in Chicago with an even better-paid wife?
Obama was never even mugged, much less wounded in combat!
Talking about Obama's "gallantry" is an insult to our brave soldiers who earned the right to be decorated for gallantry by risking or sacrificing their lives in combat, or for others who overcame terrible handicaps or suffered and died in the service of humanity.
Obama is just another preppy lawyer.
Relating this to the presidential election (which IS of paramount importance to citizens every time), I guess we'd have to conclude that McCain most "deserves" to be POTUS, because he survived the appalling experience of being a POW and emerged with grace.
If we have any sense, however, we had better get some new criteria for how we'll choose NATIONAL POLICY. Obama has not had the "appalling experience" of being a POW and yet he somehow knows better than to recommend that American voters endure the "appalling experience" of having neocons run their government.
Many people today are homeless, in prison, divorced, and even dead because they drank too much of the beer that John and Cindy McCain distributed all over the place for 25 years. Drop the POW justification for McCain being crowned and WAKE UP. Do something. Win the election.