Recorded live at the Middle East Corner in Boston on April 26, 2017. The Reverend Kevin P. O’Brien, The Droimlins, Duncan Wilder Johnson and Jim Healey were also on the bill.
Recorded live at the Middle East Corner in Boston on April 26, 2017. The Reverend Kevin P. O’Brien, The Droimlins, Duncan Wilder Johnson and Jim Healey were also on the bill.
…it all just seems so sensationalized.
–Aziz Ansari
I know ppl like u think it’s “cool” to theorize about quantum fluctuations, but the heat death of the early universe isn’t something to romanticize.
–Frances Bean Cobain
…I say hey Janet
you are the one, you are the sun
and I’m your dutiful planet…
–Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds
This Guns N’ Roses weekend is over.
-Your Writer on Tour with Ironwhore, July 2005
Waking up with a hardon is the best thing to happen to me in years. Never mind I quit smoking, drinking and the Life, that I’ve published three collections of poetry and prose and survived as a working singer songwriter for the last 5 years, or that we just wrapped 4,484 miles pulling in to Hippie Town at 9pm last night. Waking up erect is good news from the Gods, like we’re gonna win this thing. Know what I mean, good Reader? As we were leaving Austin 19 days ago, it dawned on me that I probably have arthritis, if not in my left middle finger, then certiainly on my right thumb. Anyone reading this blog on the regular knows I haven’t caught my breath in over a year-and there are other, less savory conditions and maladies that’ve fell on me in these paling years, not the least of which being a lack of libido. I let it all slide, rather than jump through the bureaucratic hoops of health insurance that only led nowhere-but decreased interest in sex was, at the time, viewed as an improvement. Sex seemed to always land me in trouble somehow, and, by and large the partners I had were colossal wastes and the biggest drains of my time, on my health and my career as a day worker, writer and performer.
The truth is I’ve let a lot of things go. I’ve insulated myself from the world with this gig. I’ve maintained at minimum, and pushed harder when I needed to, but when I look back at the last 5 years and think about the fact that I’m 42, I’m terrified and disgusted-the former boring through nights pocked and shot through with anxiety, and the latter beating the opposite sex to the punch. I couldn’t fuck and I didn’t want to. It’s called depression, and low self esteem, which can intermingle in a vicious cycle that the worst people will blame you for, but actual compassion for, even if welcomed, can veer too close to commiseration and in any event is a shit substitute for understanding. The silver lining is the coffee’s done, it’s time to wake up, this gig is over in less than 2 months and, like the Buddhists say-the best time to start was last year, the next best time is right now. Lest we forget, I taught myself how to write these last 5 years, and the dream of being a columnist has been realized, thanks in no small part to you and your wonderful Readership. I’ve got a 2009 Monk’s Robe Orange Honda Element and a Tacoma Guild. I live in a post-gentrified Paradise and every dumb ailment and malady I’ve mentioned can be treated by swallowing a pill-ok, I still need to look into why I can’t catch my breath, it’s true, and wish me luck as I enter their world and try to get the help I need.
This blog has always been the balloon to my wet cement blues. I talk myself down from the noose here, and you read me and it’s perfect. Healing myself with my own medicine bag, sitting down to type and hang it on the fucking wall, feeling supported and, most of all, seen by you is terribly important to me-a rudder in the shitswells of a dark and calmitous world, the biggest boon and best thing to happen to me in years besides waking up with a hardon this morning. Oh yeah, that. It seems like the weeks get away from me. I mean, sure, I work full time, and I just spent 18 days on the road with my Boss, but time gets away from me-that is, the time to address the many peccadilloes and tragic breakdown I’ve been skirting since I turned 40. I feel like I should address it, tacitly, get up on it like Ahab, and chronicle the savage journey I’ve undergone since deciding to stop being depressed (I am NOT saying that this decision cured my depression AT ALL). Brother Bean has asked for it, in the past, and I feel like I’d do well to bring it back for you-hip you to the saga of a working class ex-Pat punkrocking rockabilly New journalist with a a whole lot of time on his hands, a new car and a rekindled libido. I’ll still try, good Reader. You bet. But I’ve got to wrap this. I still believe in my dreams and I feel like I’ve got something to live up to, until the next time we meet, so I should get cracking.
May your crown be a halo. See you next Thursday motherfucker.
Greetings from the wasteland and hello from the high rooms. I’m writing this from the War Room, a kitchen in an apartment of the last Confederate Governor of the U.S.’ old place, in sweltering downtown Austin. I’m writing it on a Monday so I can get the world off my neck. The afternoons are best for poetry but I blew it out yesterday with a poem so bitter I won’t be able to share it with anyone, except maybe the Devil himself. Although, when it comes to offending folks, the creation of Art usually wins out. As it does over: sentimentality, decency and even privacy-yep, all of these and especially privacy are rolled over in favor of getting product out. Be it a poem, blog post, Youtube clip or article-content trumps everything. Which isn’t to say I wanted to hurt you. That’s not true. There are some of you I was trying to hurt. At least I’m not trying to offend. Whoops. That’s not true either. What do you want from me? I’m a digital garbage man so stick out your can. If I don’t put out at least 600 words a week, black detritus piles up in my mind and I start weighing heavier and less savory options, if you know what I mean.
I started this blog 7 years ago, emulating Dr. Thompson and all but killing for his place on the pulse, his connectivity and prescience, his wit and high drama and even his gloomy war drum tone. His predictions always came home to roost, leading Frank Mankiewicz to dub him the “least factual but most accurate” reporter on the Campaign Trail in ’72-and we all know what’s happened since then. Trust me on this, Brother, if it got too weird for Hunter Thompson then you know we are in for one hell of a ride. Nutter’s Rule. I’ve written on it before. A future on the order of raining frogs and swarming clouds of locusts is all but imminent-because that is the power of dreaming and it’s all those Nutter’s could hope for. The music they play in mass alone should hip you to the sad imagination of folks who don’t have premarital sex and are afraid to die. In their defense, we’re all afraid to die-it’s just that some of us have the sense to understand the Wisdom that living their way is just like dying, so we may as well get on with it, which is probably what Dr. Thompson was thinking on that black day in Febuary 2005.
That’s what is wrong with my generation but don’t get me started on my generation. Or, do. It’s only Monday. My next 600 ain’t due up until sometime Thursday, and that’s plenty of time for me to examine my place in this culture and where I fit in to my Generation-because I certainly didn’t know it or fit in at the time. Shaving your head and donning braces and boots wasn’t popular where I come from. Neither was skateboarding, or doing anyting except getting your 12 year old girlfriend pregnant and drinking a case of Bush big boys at the trestle on a Friday night. Playing in a band wasn’t either, believe it or no, at least not the type of music we were playing-but we did it anyway. Of course I’d want to go back there, like the song says, but if I can’t then I’ll settle for the attitude we had back then. Because goddamnit, the Buddhists were right, attitude is everything. We did shit back then, that no one else was doing. Because we were bored and our parents didn’t care. We smoked and drank post-Nevermind, and we wrote. Those journals are gone, or burned, or on a shelf in a cold garage in Middletown, Delaware at my father’s house. It’s a shame what happened to those journals and the young idea is gone. We’re all alone in the New Century but connected somehow in the hall of mirrors of social media.
It’s all fucked and I guess it always was. The real kick in the balls is that never stopped me before. I haven’t been breathing right for the last year and a half. It’s been a long time that I should be far from here. I got a Monk’s Robe Orange 2009 Honda Element with 53,000 miles and some hail damage on it that bothers me way more than it should. I’ve got 64 copies of All in the wind’s pressing of 150 left, and orders are still coming in. I’ve got clips of me reading and telling stories that I shouldn’t post if I cared about certain poets in my commnuity’s feelings, which I don’t, so I will. In 23 minutes I’ll have to report back to my boss, smoke him out and make a dinner run. 5 years ago I walked out of the food service industry for good. I threw out my serving blacks and began the search for meaningful work. I’ll let you fill in the blanks as per if I’ve ever found it, and offer that the only meaningful work there is is for yourself. You can be a slave in the service of another but you’re still a slave. You can draw your own conclusions, of course, but I should’ve been gone 2 years ago, when I looked back at my life in horror and knew that if I stayed any longer I’d only be dying.
See you coming out the grave, motherfucker.
Recorded live at Brickbat Books, Philadelphia, September 2016.
Catch Jim Trainer speaking in Boston next Wednesday April 26, at the Middle East Corner, with the Reverend Kevin O’Brien, Duncan Wilder Johnson, The Droimlins, and Jim Healy.
8:30PM, $5 advance tickets, $8 day of the show. Please click here.
Jim Trainer will be speaking and reading from All in the wind, his latest collection of poetry and prose, at Toast Philly on Thursday April 27 with local favorites Charlie O’Hay and Lamont Steptoe.
7PM, Please click here.
Jim Trainer returns to the Mill Street Cantina for a special 90 minute set on Friday April 28.
9PM, Please click here.
…to live outside the law, you must be honest…
-Bob Dylan, Absolutely Sweet Marie
It’s a good thing I don’t care about what you think then, isn’t it?
-Your Writer on Facebook this week
Last week on Writing On The Air cohost Martha Louise Hunter asked me where I get the time to do it all. God bless her. We were talking about this blog and how 600 words a week is the least I can do if I’m going to call myself a writer.
“Of course there’s Letter Day,” I told her and cohost Joe Brundige, “and I’m posting a poem every day for the month of April celebrating National Poetry Month.”
I told them that All in the wind was book 2 of the 10 that will be published through Yellow Lark Press, beginning with September in 2015 and ending with a collection, as-yet-unnamed, in 2025.
“10 books in 10 years is great, a fine goal,” I went on. “-but I’m only making up for lost time.”
Brother Joe and I share a symmetry, and experience the joy of communication that can happen between two stringently honest people. It took appearing on the show twice for me to realize-I am doing the thing. It’s good when that happens, as opposed to the slave driving I’m usually doing with myself and the crippling feelings of despair anyone reading this blog is, by now, all too familiar with.
I finally booked Boston. I’ll be speaking at the Middle East Corner with the Reverend Kevin O’Brien and bussing down to Philly the day after, for the Philly release of All in the wind. Joe and I recorded an episode of Chillin Tha Most at the mansion last week, and it should be on the net next Thursday. Last week was the kind of week I’d like to have every week, with gigs and radio appearances almost every day. I kept on pushing till the light of day. Which is heaps different than the life I’m living in my head, where it’s never enough and I’m only a day working coward. What’s next is complicated but simple in terms of intent.
I’m quitting this gig. Moving out to the east side. Minimizing. Scaling down. I’m not sure how it will look or how to even vaguely monetize poetry and the spoken word-but I’m full of ideas and already making half my imminent rent with the gigs I’m already playing. It’s strange to be striking out now but hardly unlikely. I’ve long since abandoned anything resembling the common tropes of being an American. I don’t have any kids, don’t even have a girlfriend. But I’ve got a passion for media and all forms of communication. I hope to get further invested in print and broadcast media. Before I fly out to Beantown the MAMU should be fully assembled and my next purchase will be a touring vehicle.
It took me a while to wrap my head around it. I had to keep it to myself and it made me resentful. I couldn’t talk about my plans on here, there was some bad blood about me leaving but there doesn’t have to be. I’ve started paying my taxes, I got a new dentist and a healthy line of credit. Everything is moving as it should. My next venture will be some time researching topics for the blog, so’s to avoid the kind of soul searching pap and whine that she hates and can appear on Going For The Throat when its weekly deadline is on my neck. Your ideas are welcome, as are paying gigs-do you have a story for me? Can we find a way to pay my freight so I can come to your town, speak and play? Please chime in, in the comments below, or drop me a line at: jamesmichaeltrainer@gmail.com.
This east coast jaunt will be a short one but I’m thrilled to be sharing the stage with the Reverend Kevin O’Brien, Duncan Wilder Johnson, The Droimlins, and Jim Healy in Boston. The Philly release of All in the wind is stacked, with award winning poets Charlie O’Hay and Lamont Steptoe reading. By the time I go back to work I’ll have played at least 3 shows on the east coast, sold some books and burned hundreds of miles. I’ll be exhausted, which is how I like it, and plan to be in the coming months. Into it, no stops, full bore.
See you on the East Coast motherfucker.
…it is in the shelter of each other that the people live…
–Pádraig Ó Tuama
Let’s keep hustlin’.
–Brian Grosz
…without you my address would be the wind…
-from All in the wind
…you’re going to have to accept that a lesbian chainsaw dominatrix or two might be involved.
–broliloquy
My name is Jim Trainer and I wish I was somebody else. I mean, there’s something in the way. I mean, I took the last 2 days off work, for my birthday and to “get some stuff done” and the result was only epic laziness. Lunch and gift swapping with a friend. Driving into dusk to see musicians perform in plays. Eating water ice and falling in love with Austin again. Before I chalk up the last 2 days to “not living my dreams” or being lazy, allow me to invoke the wisdom and language of psychotherapy, and ask-what am I getting out of it? The answer is dumb-I had a peaceful couple days with no torture, no monkey, no blues. Basically I was hiding. This doesn’t bode well. Psychologically speaking, I’ve set it up so I will have to live my dreams. Using the alchemy of inner dialogue I told my Self, “If you live your dreams I won’t come down on you for being a piece of shit.” There are so many ways to deconstruct this deal I have with my Self, and none of them are good! Ah, but don’t too wise, for writing is my rabbit in a hat, and this blog my weapon of choice-and this is how. By the end of this graph I have had some insight, a revelation that there within the dialogue with my Self is the kernel of it-the micro and the blueprint. My life has been always being 2 steps ahead of the whip. What a fucked up way to live, let alone think and react. Out of fear, like a slave or Catholic. For shame.
Not to mention I feel great. I mean, today I woke up at 7:45AM, like always, but I went back to bed after I put the coffee on. I dreamt that my boss had wiped his hands on my tux shirt and when I went to confront him about it, his door was closed and his room was dark with a note on the door (and it was my Mother’s bedroom door wtf). Tangential but relevant. It’s a circus in my mind. Fear is the carnival barker and the crowd has lined the tent 2 times round, clutching their dirty children and tickets in hand. I’m sitting here typing this in the bright light of day with my Hugh Hefner robe over the clothes I wore to bed last night. I feel rested, which is necessary. Hell I even refused sex a couple weeks ago because the call came in after I was already in PJs. Do you have any idea how baffling it is for the male mind to refuse sex? It can short out the man-wires. I woke up the next day confused and ashamed, like I had done something wrong-but I was so rested I forgot about it and got on with the day. My point is I feel rested today, after 2 days of hiding from the whip, instead of hustling 2 steps ahead of it, and somehow not being a “piece of shit”, according to myself anyway, the Mind. In body I couldn’t feel better. I just wish I was somebody else and here’s why.
It’s been a long time that I should be far from here. I know that my desire for the artist’s life is how I got this far. It’s not what I thought it would be and I know I could do so much more. Knowing you could be more is strange. Well, not strange-it’s evolution, it’s growth. It’s savage, amoral and bloody. Birth comes from death. Knowing you could do more is heaps more manageable, if slippery. I can’t say I’m not accountable to myself. I can’t say that there isn’t a chasm between who I am and what I’m doing and who I think I am and what I’m doing. It’s all so very twisted and fucked and I can’t see the bottom. All I can do is live my best today, try harder this time. (Do you know how exhausting that is?). It’s just so fucked because I know I’ll find myself here again. Dissatisfied. I need a life coach who’ll tell me that everything’s gonna be ok before she fucks my brains out and kicks my ass out the door. Sorry. If I’ve lost you it’s because I lost myself.
What I am trying to describe here is what has gotten me this far. Dissatisfaction is why I dropped out of college, left the hometown, found work as a DJ, singer songwriter, orator and spoken word poet. Dissatisfaction is why I spent weeks on the road, sleeping and driving for as many as 7 weeks a stretch, across Canada and the midwest, along the Gulf and up the West and East coast. Dissatisfaction is why I’ve had 3 books of poetry published in the last 5 years and dissatisfaction is the sole reason that 2 of them were published by my own press. Dissatisfaction is why I left Philly, and tried my hand hawking wares and doing everything from handing out lunchmeat to donating plasma to walking around campus dressed like a Hershey Kiss. I’ve lost you. I’ve lost me. Is seeking and forging the life I want born of dissatisfaction? Or is it something else? Is knowing I could do and be more the same as hating myself? That’s certainly how it feels. And as far as how it feels, this, we know, is my remedy. These 903 words. This post. This time at the knives, hacking and working it out. We do it ’cause we have to. As far as pace and productivity, goals and the ability to relax and unkink without fear that the whip will come down but yet still pushing on? You know if I had the answer, good reader, I would give it to you. Right before I fly out the door and hit the streets after the heart of this dream. A lonely hunter indeed.
It goes on.
Introjective depression – the autonomous kind, on the other hand, is characterized by intense self-criticism and there is frequently, then, an intense drive for achievement to offset the internalized sense of inferiority and self-scrutiny. These individuals can be extremely critical of others as well as themselves and can be intensely competitive, often achieving a great deal, but with little sense of satisfaction – no amount of external validation seems to satisfy the harsh and demanding person that they can be in relationship to themselves.
-Karl Stukenberg on Sydney Blatt’s Developmental Theory of Depression
it seems we lose the game,
before we even start to play
–Everything Is Everything
Got my walking papers. Guess this means the gloves are off. 5 years can feel like a lifetime or it can go by way too fast on shift, on the clock and working for the man. If it sounds like I’m complaining it’s because that’s my voice, I’m charged with it-fiery and riled and launching these missives through the barrel of a gun. It’s because the last thing I want to do is tell you a lie or waste your time. It’s this voice I honed and came to grips with, working for Mr. Fox. The job gave me a bedtime, gave me the morning, still hated but doable, forced me to eat meals and sleep and watch movies and be lazy. Above all it taught me what I need to be high functioning, and it’s hardly what I thought it would be.
I’ve published 3 books in the last 5 years, written hundreds of blogs and letters, and played more than 120 gigs, not counting spoken word and storytelling gigs, since I was hired on. I’m glad to put it this way, and catch a rare reprieve from the inner critic. The first sentence of this paragraph riddles the inner critic with buckshot, stuffs its mouth with gauze and sends it 6 feet closer to Heaven. I might not be Henry Rollins but I’m gaining on him. The pace is fucked. I’ll never be happy with how long these things take and that’s probably because I’ll never be happy with myself. I feel like I’m behind before I even wake up in the morning and wonder of the wisdom, sung by Lauryn Hill, in that song from days past. But there’s so much more to it than that.
Up against it as we are, fucked and doomed to play their game should be enough to motivate, and it does. The specter of death, terribly advancing on us from the day we’re born should be enough, and it is. Never being Henry Rollins, never being good enough, has been fine motivation these slipshod and lean years-I know where it’s gotten me but I draw a blank when I think about what’s next. It’s because you can’t build on a negative. Anybody who’s ever quit anything knows that not doing it is only the beginning. You must substitute it with something you are doing. Quitting smoking, for example. Of course, I had to first stop doing it. Once I did the space opened up for something else. Saying FUCK FUCK FUCK in my head seems to work, until I rupture a blood vessel, but certainly got me through terrible and troubling hours at the IPRC a few weeks ago. At every step of All in the wind‘s production I was struck with the anxiety of never living my dreams-a great dread that neatly incorporates my fear of death and incredible lack of self esteem into a thorny and torrid cocktail called WHY I WORK ALONE.
Fear of dying will get you out of bed in the morning. You bet. A voice in your head telling you you’ll never be anything, never were anything, your parents were right and just because you left your hometown doesn’t mean you got away can also be great motivation, but not in the long run. I’m 41 and I feel like I am just getting started. Yogic wisdom tells me that all we are ever doing is getting started, and completing tasks with the quickness of Shiva’s wheeling hands. The twisted cocktail of death and low self esteem, and the example of great men like meteors burning across the small town sky of my psyche can be potent, virile and all the ingredients needed for a bomb-but I feel like I’m gonna need a fire and for a fire you need fuel.
Work in media suits me. It’s probably the only kind of work besides performing in which I feel like I am making a change. I’m struck, sitting here, that it was just over 5 years ago when I decided to do something meaningful with my life and said goodbye to the bars with a few answered ads for Caregivers on craigslist. In the last 5 years I was able to produce consistently as an artist by going to sleep at a certain time every night, and getting up at the same time every morning. I had to make enough money to fund the first pressings of All in the wind and September , and have enough spare cash to fly out to the many unpaid (if not thankless) gigs in Philly and Louisiana. HAAM paid my healthcare premiums but I was only able to get behind the trouble in my mouth with a begrudging loan against an inheritance from my mother, who sent me a check made out to the dentist. Which is nothing I want to get into now. It should be noted that I’m sitting on a lengthy backlog of posts, inspired by the prospect of being on RawPaw’s payroll in the Fall of ’14 and a request from Bean Maguire to recount my savage road to sobriety. The point, now mangled and drug down this winding graph, is I only did it with a whole lot of gumption, even more bitterness and a little bit of luck.
I discovered what I need these last 5 years. What I want has never been in question, but the crossroads of dread and inspiration at the hated age of 41 has me asking other questions. Like, how will I hit 20 major cities a year and maintain my bedtime? How can I possibly create without seeming to be in control of what happens within my own 4 walls? Simply, maybe I’m not Rollins. It’s not exactly in the cards to be on the road for over 200 days a year. Knowing what I need is a start, knowing that it’s fuel is even better, and how I can be at my strongest and even ease the grip of this dream, live a little and breathe is healthy, and necessary. the area of pause, as Papa put it.
Bukowski, as close to an example and road as I have, lived most of his life at War, but the man knew how to rest, too, and the author’s photos on his later works showcase the hard earned, worn and warm smile of Hank-a man aware of his limitations and therefore resting fully in his own power, if not in love then at peace.
“Fuck Yoga,” my partner was saying, “you should take up boxing.”
We were on the long slink into Texas from Louisiana. Crossing the gulf coast underneath godheads of clouds that rained on us as we passed.
“Something where you can hit someone, and get hit.”
I was wound tight but it wasn’t the traffic. It wasn’t from my third cup of gas station coffee either.
“Just sit back,” I told him and eased the stereo up to 10.
Suddenly the rain broke and the road wound long to the horizon. A good sign. I rolled the windows down. My partner fell asleep without another word.
The close quarters of a black 2016 Hyundai Santa Fe were enough to make us buggy, rolling down the windows or reaching for the stereo, a set of earphones or a piece of gum. Any way to create some space. My partner slept for a lot of the drive. Most in fact, which was ok, and much better than unsolicited advice about my “short fuse” or spartan road diet of sliced apples and bread and cheese from Starbucks. It wasn’t all bad and in fact was mostly good. We had a good run and he offered encouragement with his criticisms, especially after my set at Siberia on Saturday.
The gist of it is that in twenty years of booking bands, Bernard can spot talent and according to him I’ve got it. As much as I’ve heard that over twenty years of performing, his words sank in, really got in there. It was undeniable and I heard him. He also offered that maybe the dayjob shouldn’t be anything but. When I told him my plans of riding my caregiving gig as long as I could he said it was a mistake. I heard him, too. This blog ain’t about him though. At least not specifically.
This post is about a life devoted to the creation of Art. An attempt to disabuse myself of fearful notions that have only kept me doleful and caged. I took the safe route. Perhaps. I still made Art. In Yoga this morning I realized that everything I think is just that-what I think. This is some powerful medicine, Brothers&Sisters, and between the kind words of my tour partner and the self-realization afforded one on the Yogic path, I can see out. I ain’t so scared anymore. So, then- what am I waiting for?
I don’t know. But my laziness knows no bounds. There’s been a lot of fucking about since we pulled off LaTex Road last Monday. I started back working full-time, which ain’t easy. I’ve submitted some work and attempted to book some. But much like when I was smoking and boozing and knew I was not living authentically-I know now that I’m not at 100%. The details of it are shameful. I don’t know why you’d want to read about it, but you do, and for this I am forever thankful.
Philly is the last to be booked on my east coast mini-tour. Perhaps that’s how it should be but I’ve known about these dates since May- when I pushed back my usual June shows to September, and added Boston and NYC. Some shit fell through. Mostly unforeseen but now I know. Also, I don’t need to be reminded that throughout my endeavors I will find a way to blame myself, to prove that I’m not good enough or worry about screwing it up long enough to actually screw it up. Fly into Boston at twice the cost of a ticket quoted in May, without radio, without a local third act and without a place to stay. Not to mention without New York City booked at all. Some shit fell through. Other shit I worried myself into a fit over, while doing nothing but laying on my back and masturbating.
Shameful, I know. It’s fucking crazy being me. I don’t know what I’d do without you, good reader. I’m still kicking against it, the blues, insisting on this life and burning down the savage road I first stepped foot on over twenty years ago. I’m still fucking it up colossally too, making twenty year old mistakes. It’s as if I’m doing this for the first time, which, in a way, I am. Sober. Completely me. Raw. Nervous. Wanting a cigarette so bad I could cry, at times, but knowing that my pain would only stop there. It’s quite the ride Brothers&Sisters. I’m quaking in my boots. I’m nervous and raw and completely me. Still after it. Still alive. Still going for the throat.
Namaste
There is no Buddha but the Buddha that you are. If you meet the Buddha on the road you haven’t understood what the Buddha is. It is none other than your original mind. The idea of seeing the Buddha as outside of your self is conceptual-as is “becoming enlightened.” One can not become enlightened because that would assume that you are gaining something that you don’t have. Your basic nature is enlightened, awake, free, non-dual. This is completely experiential and not conceptual. You have to kill the concept of Buddha both inside and out.
–JJ Simon