DESULTORIUS
BY
ROBERT WALLACE PAOLINELLI
The day is warm and conducive to mellow
thinking, for slow strolls, stopping now and then to admire some view or a
plant, a flower or the erratic flight of a humming bird flitting from tree to
tree, space to space; a day, also, for
writing, the slow process of trying to say the impossible, the ineffable, the
unutterable things which men think but never say. It is said that the school of realism in art
and literature should conform to nature or to real life. That's laughable: Nature does not conform; it is rugged, violent, unpredictable,
tantalizing to the innocent who see beauty in a hooded cobra which bites them
and then the innocent die wondering how something so beautiful could be so
deadly. That is nature. Life, that amorphous, intangible, tenuous something which savants and philosophers have been examining
and writing about, does not conform.
Only men and their tight little conservative ideas about what life is or
is not, make tribalism and social convention and expect everyone else to live
thusly. If ever a thing were undefinable it is Life itself and it can hardly conform to
anything because it does not conform to any rule, law, system and the like,
although there are many pretentious beings who will wax prolific on the nature
of life and grow angry when you disagree with them.
Goutama Buddha, the great sage
of India, and Lao Tzu, who wrote the Tao the Ching,
have come closest to finding a "definition" of life and to offer a
few ideas on how one should conduct one's self.
But being largely ignored in the West, Buddha and Lao Tzu remain enigmas
to the materialistic, competitive West and in the East, where Western
materialism and Marxism have taken hold, Buddha and Lao Tzu become nothing more
than ancient residue that people burn incense to as did those of old who made
blood sacrifice to propitiate the primordial gods.
A writer simply writes.
He may write a novel, a short story, a poem, a treatise, a shopping list
a "things to do," or a letter.
Writing consists of letters put together as words; each letter written one at a
time. That's about as fast as any writer
can write: One letter at a time, one
word at a time; even if a computer or an
electronic typewriter is used and the typist-writer can type one-hundred words
a minute, it is still only one letter at a time, one word at a time, one
sentence at a time and so on. That is
not difficult to grasp;
on the contrary, it is very easy to understand; however, it is quite another matter to sit
down and take up one's writing instrument and begin the long process of one
letter at a time, one word at a time, one sentence at a time and so on.
Life and writing are unpredictable. To think otherwise is to be foolish. There is, however, the predictable, academic
method of writing and the journalistic method of writing. The academic method
teaches, or rather pretends to strive for clarity and espouses the concept of a
well-developed, coherent essay, wherein the first sentence is supposed to
explain the rest of the essay and every sentence of every paragraph is supposed
to define the entire paragraph; and the
last paragraph of this academic, well-developed, coherent essay, is supposed to
sum up the entire essay. That is
the academic way; that
is a lot of tripe. Then there are the
footnotes. We mustn't
forget the footnotes, which will appear at the bottom of the page or on a
separate sheet at the end of the well-developed, coherent essay. Thousands, nay, millions of students in our
education systems (it's all a system you know) are taught this method of
writing, if they digest the rudiments of this stilted, academic method--well,
they go on to become the teachers of the next generation and so on.
The journalistic school of scandalous writing is about
the worst form of writing in the American language. Journalistic writing begins with the premise
that the writer, i.e. the reporter is--must be--objective. What a lot of rot. To begin with every
living human being has an opinion and point of view. Objectivity in journalism is a farce. When an editor authorizes the following headline that editor is not objective: "HUNDREDS FLEE KILLER FLOOD." The word "Killer" is not
objective. True, floods kill humans beings and animals.
But what should be reported--objectively
is: "HUNDREDS FLEE FLOOD,"
nothing more. Journalistic writing wants
to create an atmosphere with its first paragraph--usually in bold face type
and, according to the journalistic method the reader should know
immediately: Who, What, Why, Where,
When. An example: "An army veteran, John Doe, killed his
estranged wife because she would not let him have his harmonica collection in
the couples home, last night, police said." Now that's a very
good sentence for German syntax, but is most stilted in English. But journalistic gobbledegook doesn't see it that way. Now John Die was discharged from the army ten
years before and his being a veteran had nothing to do with the murdering of
his estranged wife, yet time after time one will pick up a newspaper and see
that same method used over and over. In the first place
to call Mr. Doe an army veteran is not being objective. The very idea of objectivity is an absurdity
and to believe otherwise is arrogant and stupid. No writer is objective--writing can never be
objective because a human being with an opinion is writing words.
I just want to write:
No method, no system, no objectivity. If I want to say that the Republican Party is
the greatest enemy the United States has, I say it; if I want to say that Ronald Reagan's
presidency was riddled with corruption because, at bottom, he was corrupt, I
will say it. Nothing is sacred when it
is public.
But writing is a lot of waiting
and I know how to wait. A lot of writers feel they must crank out their fifteen hundred
words or six pages a day, or whatever their daily goal is, If one is writing with a deadline with a copy
editor or a publishing house breathing down one's neck, then the writer is
forced to become a machine and give the "boss" his quota of piece
work--such is it with all servants in bondage.
However, writing is a thing of leisure and of pleasure; it is a quiet time,
a time of reflection, contemplation, a sifting through of thoughts, experiences
or events. It should be done slowly with
no deadline, for deadlines are for the harassed, hurried, henpecked hacks who have to please an editor when all the time the only
person who needs to be pleased is the writer himself.
In ancient times when writing was only for the elite or
the priests and scribes, it was made to seem esoteric, the common folk
talked: They told stories, passing them
down to the generations and if the story changed in the oral transmission so be
it. The writing down of things fixes the
subject written about;
and when the written word is passed down it is done so sacrosanctly.
Writing and fishing have a lot in common: It takes simple tools and patience.
From the street comes the noises of
civilization: The rumble of diesel
driven buses and trucks, the roar of cheap motorcycles, the steady rumble of an
endless stream of automobiles and the voices of humanity: Loud voices, calling back and forth in
English, Italian, Chinese, Vietnamese;
the crying of children all in dissonant counterpoint with the
cacophonous, raucous engines polluting the atmosphere which no one really cares
about. Oh, we pay lip service to
"clean air," and the august U.S. Congress passes a multitude of laws
seemingly against pollution--but the laws don't work
because the perpetrators of pollution don't want to stop their profits--and the
people of America are hooked on their cars and their throw-away consumerism. Automobiles, chemical
plants, nuclear generating plants, coal-fired generating plants, all of them
contribute to pollution--but no one cares--it's the bottom line for the
manufacturers and the convenience for consumers which counts. If the government and the people truly cared
about our atmosphere and our earth, we would not have the horrendously deadly
situation we have. However, as soon as
someone can figure out how to make a profit out of cleaning up the air and the
earth--well, then we will start to do something about the problem. Profit caused pollution and profit will stop
it. Ironic, absurd and
stupid.
I am no Marxist and I have no use for any form of
communism--so do not accuse me of being a Marxist-Communist because I speak so
harshly against profit. On the contrary,
I like money, but I don't like my rivers, lakes,
streams and oceans filled with deadly chemicals because the ugly business men
who dump their poisonous wastes don't want to spend money to clean up their
filth because it will cut into their profits!
That is criminal, and every polluter is a criminal. We will all die buried in our own shit or
choked by smog and while humanity gasps its last breath
someone will curse because his profit margin has been destroyed.
One of the reasons we have so much greed is the stock
market,. There
men and women buy and sell, making enormous profits for doing nothing,. How can we talk
about a "work ethic" when people only need to pick up a telephone or
push a few keys on a computer terminal and reap thousands, if not millions of
dollars while the workers of this country risk their lives in all manner of
industries for a few bucks an hour?
There is no work ethic; there is only greed which is now
fashionable.
What is life all about?
I haven't the slightest idea nor does any other
man--but every man has an opinion--and an opinion about life isn't worth the
price of a stale glass of beer or a cold cup of yesterday's coffee. I am the only human being who knows what life
is not all about: Life is not about any
of the things that any man has to say on the subject. Life is and will always be a great
mystery. No one--not past or
present--knows why humans are born or what their purpose is while they are
alive; and although medical science knows
a lot about why humans die, no man of medicine can say what death is--except in
physiological terms. So what is
life? Life is! Well, it just is and men go about acting
self-importantly playing roles:
Corporate men, salesmen, politicians, morticians, physicians,
technicians, musicians, bankers, stockbrokers, real estate people.