Dear Future Historian,
I met a miracle engineer.
He popped up at the park, I was sitting with my friends in. We had a portable speaker playing Jazz. It was my first day out after a long time and after I asked from the universe that day for it to be therapeutic. I felt kinda drained lately.
Some days ago, I was washing dishes and I felt weak and a
bit dizzy. Then again, the next day, while walking up the hill and returning
from the supermarket, carrying 2 heavy carrier bags, I wanted to sit right
there on the bench of the park I was passing by, and just wait there till
teletransportation would be invented. I was thinking about my willpower
theories. My devoted contemporary and future readers will be familiar with my
ideas about the power of keep-walking.
However, I remembered that Hope was the last evil in
Pandora’s box. How do you explain that? What if I am fooling myself? Willpower
can’t engineer miracles. Only in stories. Myths. Made up fantasies. Wishful
thinking.
I refused to believe that. Consciously, I declared to the
universe that I refuse to believe that. Nevertheless, I warned it that I can’t
control my subconscious. And, my faith doesn’t seem in good shape there. It’s
going to have to do better than keeping the silent-treatment attitude. I have
already made clear that if the story is that we are the subjects of a Godly
authoritarian narcissistic dystopia, then I’m not interested in submitting to
such a God.
People either don’t believe in God(s) or they fear and
unquestionably obey him/her/them. Not me. No. I’m an agnostic that chooses to
believe in the gods. But, refuses to let fear be my guide on my spiritual investigations.
I choose truth and love to be my guides. In which case I should be honest with
my gods. Even when that means questioning not just their existence, but even
their motives.
I met a living legend at the park. One of Joseph Campbell’s hero
myths.
So, we sit at the park, on the grass, jazzing the
surroundings. And, the calmest and happiest smile comes and approaches.
‘I like your style and your music,’ he said.
‘Thank you, do you wanna hang out with us?’
‘Sure.’
He had two scars on his neck. We asked. He said he was in a
witness protection scheme.
‘They tried to cut my throat, but it didn’t work,’ he said.
We kept chatting, listening to music, inhaling the
sunny-day-in-the-park.
‘If you could choose to live at any point in history, when
would you be born?’ my friend asked.
‘I am fascinated by stories,’ I said. I’d choose to live
now. Cause never before had we had such a vast access to an almost endless
number of stories. Plus, it would be a terrible idea to be a girl at any other
point of history.’
‘What about pre-history?’ they asked me.
‘No Netflix,’ I said.
The sun didn’t stay still. My friends got hungry.
‘Before we go, I have to ask you something. I might never
see you again, and I must know. I told you I love stories. Survival stories are
my favourite. Have you ever contemplated on why you survived? I mean, I’m happy
you have, but why/how did you? Was it mere chance? Or was there something that
contributed to your survival?’
‘Yes. Yes, I have thought about it. I was on a road trip,
and I went to visit my grandfather’s grave. I was talking to him for a long
time, and then I continued my journey. I slept inside my car that night. In the
middle of nowhere. A gang saw my car, and being unaware that someone is in it,
thought it was a great opportunity to steal it and use it for their purposes.
When they got in the car it was too late. I had already woken up and saw their
faces. So, they decided that the best thing to do, given the circumstances,
would be to torture me, then drive me to the desert, and cut my throat.
I was quite surprised that I was still conscious when they
did cut my throat, but I thought that this was not an information that they
should have. So, I just played dead. They left me, and I heard them walking,
starting the engine, and driving away. I opened up my eyes, but I was frozen. I
could not move at all. So, I did the only thing I could do. I prayed. In a
while, I felt like someone was lifting me up, and I managed to get on my feet.
I cut of my sleeves, and I tied them around my neck. The doctors later said
that I had lost 35% of my blood.
I saw a tree, not too far away. I thought that I would
probably die soon anyway, but I wasn’t willing to just wait for death to take
me. I wanted to fight it at least. I decided to walk to that tree. Against the
odds, I was still standing when I reached it. So, I kept walking towards
civilization. I still didn’t think that I would survive, but as long as I could
walk, I would walk. Because I was losing so much blood, I started hallucinating.
I still had consciousness of my situation, but I was seeing visions. Visions of
a future that was taken away of me. Visions of the family I could have created,
the places I could visit, the things I could have done.
So, I kept walking. Walking to claim that future. Walking
till I couldn’t walk any more. Or maybe, even if I couldn’t anymore then at
some point I would walked enough to be found.’
‘Wtf!’
‘!’
It was like someone was reading my blog and sending me the
perfect farce.
Like Jesus did with Thomas, he let me touch his scars.
A real legend. A real miracle engineer. A real superhero.
A real dude, at the park, that was dead, and then he somehow
managed to rise again. Moreover, he bumped to me, at Easter, to tell me his
resurrection story.
If I believe that gods are created by humans’ worship-powers,
then how on Earth have I dismissed the idea that the god I broke up with in my
20s is one of the most worshiped ones. The only one that managed to separate
history in two; before and after him.
When I was about 8, we went with a lot of people from our
church outdoors for a huge Easter barbecue. In Greece at Easter the main dish
is lamb on spit. To be evenly cooked, it has to be constantly turned, during
the many hours of its cooking. On a sunny Easter day, being next to the burning
barbecue pit, it feels like you’re being cooked yourself. Everyone took his/her
turn to play the role of the yet-uninvented-electrical-cook-on-a-spit. Ten minutes each were enough.
It was a big gathering. A girl just two years older than me sat there to turn
one of the lambs.
‘That’s the
most fun thing I’ve ever done,’ she said.
‘Can I try
that one?’ I asked the lady that was turning the other one. She was already
getting sweaty, so she welcomed the idea to find an heir to this important
role.
The girl on
the other side seemed even more excited with the idea that kids will feed the
adults.
‘Let’s not
get up till the lambs are ready,’ she said.
I was also
having fun. Not so much with the work itself, but with the idea that I could do
something as well as an adult could do. I had my doubts, but if the adults were
really ready to let me in charge of half of our main plate, then maybe they also
thought that I could do it. I had to make sure. Maybe they just expected me to
quit soon. That’s exactly why they’re not stopping me. Only way to find out
would be to actually stay there and boil from the fire and continue to turn the
lamb even after my arm starts to hurt, and ask for the miracle of determination
to appear, or something. And so I did. All the way through. For about 1,5 hours.
The girl of
course on the other lamb left after a few minutes.
But me? I
live my life doing ordinary things as if I fight the archetypical Dragon of
Chaos. And, even if I struggle sometimes to be able to hide some days that
high-functional does not mean that I’m not struggling to function… still, I am
willing to ‘keep walking’ and live my hero myths if that’s what it takes to
walk home up the hill with the supermarket carrier bags or wash the
unrealistically big pile of dishes (when 1 hour ago everything was washed. What
on earth is happening in that kitchen is almost supernatural!)
And then I
meet that dude at the park. LOL
I thought
to use his story in a short story. Something maybe with a suicidal guy that
goes on a road trip before he shoots his brains out. During that trip, he gets
kidnapped and survives with his throat being cut, but with a change of mind
about life that made him decide to live. A kind of determination that gets
magnified by someone that just some hours ago was planning his last words on
pocket notebooks and napkins, spending his last money on cheap breakfast and
cheap wine.
It would go
something like that:
He took the decision to kill himself one day at the lunch
break in a twelve-hour shift. It was more like an epiphany than a choice.
While he was chocking on his packed-lunch sandwich
because he was chewing in a hurry to manage to have a fag before he had to
return inside...
I didn’t know how to continue.
I always dreamed to write stories. Essays were not my cup of
tea, but when life does not let you shut your door and write some hours every
day, or even once a week for gods’ sake, then freewriting diaries might be your
only hope. Plus, stories like that are way too good to be disguised in
irrelevant plot inventions. Especially when they’re written without childcare.
Either way, that is the only way I can write the story given
my circumstances, and I will embrace the interruptions.
Either way I have to go now. Go, and keep walking.
I’m leaving the conclusion part for you my dear reader.
Stay safe and take care.
Lotous Michalopoulou
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