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Off On Our Own. Ted Carns
Читать онлайн.Название Off On Our Own
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781943366118
Автор произведения Ted Carns
Жанр Дом и Семья: прочее
Издательство Ingram
I’ve come to believe that life works for us and with us, and that the concept of providence has to do with providing what is necessary, rather than what is desired. It’s a matter of coming into alignment with providence, or the will of Creation, if I can put it that way. You can see the fluidity of providence in the food chains, for example, where and how affluence and excess throw wrenches in its gears. But that’s a philosophic discussion for another time.
Now I’ve said that sometimes our house feels like a conscious being. At times it acts so alive and aware, it’s eerie. My electric shop has a small, glass-roofed bay window facing south. It’s a commercial brand window that had a difficult, puzzling leak on the top frame that holds the glass. I kept meaning to get around to fixing it but it was really intimidating. This one had me stumped.
The roof above the window is covered with dark charcoal-colored shingles. I often lay warped candles on it when the sun is out, to warm them up so they can be straightened. But you’ve got to watch closely or they’ll melt. One day I took a 2-foot-long warped candle out, set it on the roof and went on to something else and spaced out. The candle started to melt and it ran down and sealed the leak. It sure looked like the leaking window fixed itself. Things fix themselves quite often up here.
Another story: I was about to put a new roof on the house. I planned to use an under-layer sheet of ice and water shield. It’s a tar-like substance that goes under the shingle, and it really seals the roof. I wanted to use so much that if you turned the house upside down it would float. I hadn’t quite figured out the economics for acquiring that much of it.
Around that time, Kathy and I stopped at a trailhead parking facility just on the other side of the mountain to eat a picnic lunch. We parked somewhat out of sight, at the edge of the woods. A little time passed and we noticed a roofing company truck pull up a short distance away. They probably assumed our car was empty and we were gone hiking, because they took several rolls of this expensive ice guard from the truck bed, set them just inside the woods and took off. It sure looked to Kathy and me that these guys had pilfered it from a job they were on and were planning to pick it up later, so we thought it was fair game. Those rolls saved us a bunch of money, and now we have a house that might just float if you turned it upside-down.
A Different Reality
A quote that always intrigued me was from the philosopher William James. He said something like: Apart from the reality we are living, there are other profoundly different realities, separated from us by the thinnest of films. I always thought that sounded cool, but I have to admit I’m not exactly sure what he meant.
My guess is these strange new realities aren’t fabrications. They don’t just hang out there obscure and unattainable. I suspect they represent some possibility that could have been attained by a different choice. One simple external step in a new direction could easily effect profound change in our lives, which in turn would go on to effect some profound change within us.
Tubs as practical wall art
Old friends
Beauty in utility
Well-loved copper pots
If those different realities didn’t apply to us, if they weren’t an option, then why the hell would he mention them or question them, or even be aware of them or conceive of them? My guess is he’s talking about realities that are accessible, and you can still change the direction of your step and thereby perhaps change everything.
This book is really about a kind of radical shift to a different reality that James may have been talking about. A radical but very simple shift and all that’s involved is a simple decision, a first step. Any person can make it in the blink of an eye and immediately after that take the first infant step into an entirely new reality. A new light is shed upon everything, and your life changes. Now you’re at peace, and then you do things, where before, you did things hoping to reach peace.
The total response to necessity is simply to do what needs to be done. I want whatever I want, desire what I wish for, I dream about flying a motorized paraglider, but I leave that to a higher will. I’ll be damned if I’m gonna take out a loan. That’s what my life is all about and I just stumbled on it through circumstance.
I wake up every day to choose between 25 different roads to excellent experience and 30 avenues to explore in pursuit of my independence. Not one of them requires a Porsche. I find in facing necessity that self-expression gains a unique and creative independence. It gets honed. Following desire does exactly the opposite.
Focus upon necessity brings a profound change and leads to a different reality. Desires are focused on the future; necessity is faced in the moment. That’s the key to creativity. The key to being able to fix, do, build and invent things is right there in the moment you face a problem or task. When you learn to give a thing permission to fix itself – a task permission to complete itself – you are made to dwell in the moment, with your faculties on full alert. Then the task itself – the broken thing itself – becomes the supervisor. Your only responsibility is to hand it tools. Those tools are your own unique and innate talents set to rest upon common sense. Humble yourself in subservience to the job. Allow the job to do the job.
When you discover this magic for yourself, you become less and less intimidated by life’s trials and labors, for now you have learned to work with things as opposed to against them. Have total faith in yourself. There are so many things we all can accomplish. There is so much we can do and so little that we cannot do. March forward with courage in yourself for you have found patience, you have met necessity. You have achieved the state of effortless effort. You have mystically penetrated to the heart of that saying: “Unless the Lord buildeth the house, the laborers work in vain.”
Every one of us is a tool chest of potential packed to the brim. Some may be missing a few screwdrivers but they are blessed with an excellent array of metric wrenches. Therefore, if you need a screwdriver offer your wrenches. Humanity has enough to fix itself, but if we fail as individuals to realize our non-dividual humanity, what good are the tools? You can’t wipe your ass with a crescent wrench.
It sure would be nice if we all abandoned desire and came to full focus on necessities. We’d all be yelling, “Hey, where’s the energy crisis? . . . Hey, how come nobody’s fighting? . . . Since when did everybody have health care? . . . Mind if I strip the drive train out of your Abrams Tank to make me a 27-foot-wide Rototiller?”
My personal spiritual, philosophical take on life is everywhere in this book, as you’ve already seen. If I don’t touch on some of those aspects you could end up simply trying to replicate things I’ve done and that could be fraught with limitations. My hope is to spark your unique creativity, to set you off on your