Virus Life
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“Are you a ticket taker or a risk taker?”
“If you want to do amazing things you need to take amazing risks and suffer greatly.”
“Anybody have any spare change?” asked a panhandling waif on an aspirator with wealthy aspirations.
“Hmm, I see a faint star at the conjunction of the head and heart life lines. Does that mean anything?” said a kid fingering green palms approaching Easter Is-land on a bamboo raft.
“Depends,” ranted a child orator standing on a soapbox. “Do you mean faint as in non-distinguishable or feint meaning to throw one off a socially agreed upon tacit path implied by pretending to understand anything while processing information with a deft movement?”
“Yes,” philosophized a child with the wit of Camus, “it’s a sublime paradox, this absurd metaphorical life theater. We have aspects of knowing. We know so much and understand nothing. We are affected, infected, rejected or injected by how we feel not what we think we understand. Life is short and sweet. Art is long. Our lives are works of art. It’s not so much that there is something strange about time. What’s strange is what’s going on inside time. We will understand how simple the universe is when we recognize how strange it is.”
“You’re just saying that,” said a voice.
“Sounds like a description of the food they serve here, speaking of strange,” one resident commented to no one in particular.
“No lie flutter by,” sighed a Monarch’s wings in Greek.
“What’s that have to do with the conservation of angular momentum and a parabola?” queried a child spinning wheelchair tires on a tennis court and making a racket while performing real alignments for friends.
“Do I love you because you are beautiful,” said Rose, “or are you beautiful because I love you?”
“Both,” sang the Greek chorus.
“You get what you pay for,” said a kid ironing words with grit, perseverance and discipline.
Every kid needs a bike.
In 1969 he volunteered for the Army, left the world and flew over the pond to Nam.
He walked out 364 days later with his shadow - a bag of bones.
He is a ghost driving a meat-covered skeleton made of stardust riding a rock floating through space.
Fear Nothing.
Transformed, he experienced free time in the long now.
This is what happened, more or less.
One of his names is Lucky Foot. What does that mean?
He elucidates in simple, clear, precise, concise English the language of savage barbarians.
It means, as an experience junky possessing genetic variant DRD4-R7 addicted to new adventures, he brings prosperity to merchants, rest-a-rant owners and nondescript sad, neglected, abandoned and emotionally well adjusted hot to trot red sheen women among humans struggling to survive life’s labyrinth without a center.
He gifts luck to money changers, manicure girls, beggars, banana women -
Landmine amputee survivors, ice and rice sellers, student-teachers, tinkers, tailors, soldiers, spies, textile merchants, weavers, artistic genius children -
Orphans, noodle mama, tea and java purveyors, gardeners, gravediggers, literary outlaws and craggy faced Dan, a boat captain in Hoi An who worked as an interpreter at MAC V during the Vietnam War.
Fate and destiny is the same thing.
If he grows up he dies.
Security is an illusion.
He presents good fortune to Rita, author of Ice Girl in Banlung, barbers cleaning his ears, high-heeled sandal ladies, love sock purveyors and rent-a-life companies.
HCE. Here comes everybody.
90% of life is showing up. When he shows up their day, life, fate and glittering fortunes improve. Karmic destiny.
Fate laughed with him in Morocco on 9/11. He was in the Sahara. He did not take possession of that event and perpetual aftermath. Fear sells.
Destiny danced with him on the is-land of Amnesia in Southeast Asia and exploring Turkey, China, Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos.
Before returning to Nam in 2009 he lived on a string of 15,000 archipelago islands between Malaysia and Papa New Genie gathering evidence about the human condition.
Each island is a letter. If you string letters together you create a word. This word depending on your imaginary perception of truth-value may or may not have meaning for you like Beauty - your true reflection in still water.
Beauty needs no tongue.
A small journey expands life’s tapestry. He’s a needle without a compass. His needle leads a thread. Threads weave a conversation.
Move like a river, rest like a mirror, respond like an echo.
I visited Mekong Blue, the Stung Treng Women’s Development Center in NE Cambodia.
Fifty women are trained in a six-month silk weaving course. They plant mulberry, harvest, dye and create silk textiles. It is a UNESCO award winner known for superior quality, creativity and originality.
Mulberry leaves everything behind. Worms eat the leaves. Their saliva makes yellow cocoons. Saliva becomes a protein and stronger than steel. They boil silkworm cocoons to extract raw yellow silk. One thread is 300 meters long.
It is separated into soft and fine threads.
Women dye the threads using natural materials:
banana (yellow)
bougainvillea (yellow)
almond leaves (black)
lac insect nests (red and purple)
prohut wood (yellow and green)
lychee wood (black and gray)
indigo (blue) and coconut (brown and pink).
Women also weave Ikat, a technique creating patterns on silk threads prior to dyeing and weaving. It is called HOL with 200 motifs.
The center improves the women’s quality of life. It breaks the cycle of poverty through vocational training and educational programs.
They have a primary school with thirty-five kids and two teachers. Everyone receives lunch. It is the single biggest employer in town after the government.
That’s so cool, said Rita. Need some ice?
Published in:
Before & After, from The Language Company.
John, a Chinese teacher is removed from his class at a middle school in Sichuan.
If his students fail to pass a test it is his fault.
Thanks for listening.