I think back on my years. To be completely honest, I’m not physically too old, but mentally I feel the strain of the years, forced to become old before my time.
Since my childhood in the 1980′s, I’ve traveled much, seen much, experienced even more at each momentary stop along my life. The sands of time keep sifting through the hourglass, grain by grain, but to me it feels more like a single fluid strand, as oxymoronic as that may seem. I see my life experience as a continual connected string of events, memories, occasions for laughter, moments for sadness, all coalescing together, unified despite all their imperfections.
And this world, even with all its flaws, is really a beautiful place. Even though I’ve seen insurmountable happiness, cherished a love that was irreplaceable, and predicted my own downfalls, I still feel optimistic for the tomorrow. The world keeps spinning, and each revolution seems to sling me higher into orbit, and it’ll be soon that I can escape this gravity.
I can almost taste the sweet elixir of bliss. And though it feels that each time I get closer it pulls away from me like the sultry tease of the the burlesque dancer with her beads swaying, I know I’m near. I see it like through the eyes of a child, wide and filled with wonder, sitting at the edge of my seat anticipating the next moment to come. It’s things like this that force me to live.
It’s almost like standing on the pure white sands of Oʻahu, before plunging down into the warm amethyst waters of the reef. Like gazing down from a 747 above the stratosphere on the thick hills of Andalusia, splashed deep with the vermilion and Indian yellow of the Fall. How the long streamers sway-sway in the breeze around the streets of Rio, as the happy shouts and laughter fill every possible crevice during Carnival. Two people distant in life but close in possibility, tracing fingertips across the Sierra night sky, each star along the way brightening as the dots connect together while the musky freshness of pine envelopes. Or the hauntingly sweet tones of a Montagnard shaman’s song, the wind rustling through the bamboos joining him in solemn unity high in the mountains of Ratanakiri.
I believe in love. Maybe not how the regular societal view sees it, but as a connection between life forces that surround us. Every and each creature, even the inanimate objects such as the trees or the wind contributing to the greater whole. I believe in love, for the sake of love itself. The intensity of its energy that flows within us, the belief that tomorrow holds endless possibility. How we build paths, though imperfect and broken, are still bridges toward eventual destiny.
And despite all my apparent cynicism, somewhere underneath it all I’m optimistic. And still, the years wander on like a meandering stream, carving out its own path, leading towards the ocean.