
Photo by Tina Hensel
Small
By
Bamboo Bill
Most of us have followed the wrong Gods home at some time or another. Reflection upon ones own mind can be paralyzing in as much as enlightening. Freedom becomes something definable in the material sense of the word but indefinable when one couples the “mind” into the question.
Having spent most of this life wondering around inspecting the nuts and bolts of my own existence I have had to draw upon humanity as a frame of reference, namely the American society. Spending a little time on bent knees in your own yard can be one hell of an adventure.
When ones ego grows rapidly and starts to displace the essence of God some pretty strange behavior can manifest. The I begins to be Self Righteous and seeks to dominate the material world around it. This fits nicely into the capitalistic engine that we all seem to fuel. The word BIG becomes the operative word. It has an entire family of words, such as Biggest, best, fastest, swiftest and so on.
What we don’t realize is that we, along with most of our neighbors tend to glorify all the Bigness of our life. Yet as a society we are seemingly void of happiness. The treadmill of having more, consuming more than another eats at our very souls like a slow cancer.
This treadmill provides for bigger government which cuts us deeper so the taxes can be extracted. When you finally see the truth, you either jump into the fire and die happy with all those material possessions or you run to high ground. Once you reach high ground your country, fellow man and big government define you as a misfit.
I had four karate studios that ran full time and I was known as one of the few karate instructors who turned their love for the martial arts into a vocation not just a hobby. As time went along, my ego grew and grew , daily I struggled magnificently to be caption Kirk of the Star Ship Enterprise, metaphorically speaking. My body worked well and my mind seemed clear as a mountain stream in mid August. All was well in my BIG life.
Then one day I left it all for reasons that are only clear to me now years later. My ego had gotten to Big, to heavy and therefore I knew I must cast off the material world that I had attached myself to. I spent a few years working on bamboo rods living frugally sometimes on the edge of invisibility. There was a sense of loneliness but at the same time a quite calm entered my life. I delt with the loneliness because I knew it was self imposed. One is born into this life alone and certainly dies alone.
Years after my journey, I met an old time friend and past student. In conversation he said, “Bill you have a little life”. Those words have never left me. This friend of mine is a warrior and has fought many battles that successful self employed people always do. I respect him for the man that he is for the total sacrifice for his family. His life has been hell the past few years and I won’t get into it. He has the Big life that he fights to maintain everyday and I have a Little Life that is relatively simply to maintain. But let me say now, the Small life is not easy, the words simple and easy somehow don’t always equate in our throw away society that is laced with instant gratification.
Now I seek not the big fish, not the holly waters, the big money, the big title, the big toys, the newest gadget or the big house. I seek the small in almost everything I do. I’m happier on this journey of being a pilgrim traveling along the road of life that society would define as a minimalist. It is kind of like realizing that a Zen Koan has no true meaning other than it is a tool to get the Zen student to recognize the foolishness of involving the mind in activities that are meaningless. For some of us once we figured this out we left the temple.
When I was thirty my body was fast, strong with the libido running high and my teeth were all there and white. Time went at a slower pace. Today at 55 my teeth are leaving me at an increasing faster rate and time is traveling faster also. Interesting comparison isn’t it. Life is coming to an end like a stream meandering down through a valley always moving always descending. A blink of the eye and I will begin another journey.
The Small is found everywhere: the red wing Black Bird with its song at dusk, my dogs excitement for the wild nature around her as we walk along a stream, the cry of a mountain lion right before dawn, a trout’s wink before he takes my fly, a crescent moon that reminds me just to smile, a Golden Eagle in flight, the sound of silence embedded in the deep woods, that feel of a plan in my hands, a gentle poem that I wrote so many years ago when read it touches my very own soul as if I read it for the very first time. The small is found in the void of the big and the finger of God is there.
The September Gods Smiled Down Upon Me
By
Bamboo Bill
I was into a good fish, a rainbow trout that had weight. Shadow and I had just entered Zen Moments pool and right before I had lowered my rucksack to the ground and telling Shadow to sit down, I saw a trout take an insect close to the surface of the cold mountain stream. He was off the main current feeding in the slick slow water created by a large boulder upstream. I stripped off line slowly from my Hardy reel tuning my ear to its lovely clicks as the line rolled off the spool. Then I cast a couple times down stream from the fish, letting the stream pull the right amount of line out. With two casts, one false and the second one, directly up stream from the rising trout…I watched my line come back down the stream slowly to me. Then, I saw the line stop and I raised the tip of the little bamboo rod and instantly felt the trout fast to my line. I had taken the camera out of the rucksack and had turned it on just encase I hooked into this fish. I laid the ruck sac open thus readying it for the trout I hoped to place upon it for the glorious piscine picture.
Shadow sat quietly and watched the passion play. The give and take of the fisherman and the trout. The trout ran into the main current and he had power, the fisherman let him have line and then managed to turn his head of the trout. The trout ran back up stream which took his power from him. I guided him toward the slow water and with another fierce run he was able to break out into the freedom of the fast water. My Hardy reel screamed the way a lover may scream in the mist of orgasm. I talked aloud to the fish and my dog Shadow gave me a glimpsing eye acknowledging the great fight that lay before her.
Once again I was able to turn the fish and he came up stream . He had expended great energy by now but still had fight left in him. I was able to get him into the slow water below the boulder that he and I had first met. I brought him to a the sandy beach I was standing on and knelled before him, struggling to pick him up. Each time my fingers touched him he would flex his strong flank muscles and free himself from my grasp. Then in one moment time stood still and I was able to grasp him and lay him on the rucksack next to my bamboo rod. I aimed the camera, took the picture and froze the moment in time forever. Gently I lifted this great September rainbow trout and placed him in the stream and he slowly swam off into the dark water.
Shadow led me out of the tall grass onto the trail, her head high in the air and nose to the wind. My head was high in the wind and with a smile on my face I found I was humming a happy tune. A tune that I could not place its name but none the less I continued to hum the tune over and over again. The two of us were happy.
During the hour walk home from the trout stream I thought about happiness. This is what I came up with. Happiness must come from inside of ones self. It cannot be achieved though the external world. Thinking that having something, a degree from Harvard, more money, another rod or another car will not make one happy. If one thinks the honor that friends bestow on them will make them happy it will not. All of the above will only excite a degree of happiness for minutes or maybe a few hours at best. Happiness must come from inside. I decided that gratitude was important. Realizing what wonderful blessings that one has everyday is important. Helping fellow man with good works creates a positive karma and a feeling of happiness.
Understanding what “Enough” means, surely is a great step in the right direction to understanding happiness. Understanding that the human condition is composed of: negative forces that impact us day in and day out, that there is pain and disappointment along with death and dieing. Even with all of these components in our lives, we can strive to be happy people. For happy people are lonely at times, they get sick, they feel the pain of life and humanity will disappoint them occasionally.
As I walked home I saw the beautiful natural world around me. I felt the September sun warm up my face and had another memory that would serve as a hedge against those rough times that always lay ahead of a Happy fisherman.