I can’t wax poetic with my words anymore. My writing has taken a Hemmingway slant. It’s the pitfalls of my profession. Excessive conjunctions and pretty are forbidden to me. I’ve placed my ands, my buts, and my obscure punctuation on a shelf. Occasionally I let out little signs while ogling them. Then I go back to work writing for people who have a high school degree. High school degrees don’t count for much these days, apparently. I write with the assumption that my readers can read and write at a middle school level, which in modern terms, translates into a twelfth grade level.
So, where are the soft and drinking melodies of the soul?
I’ve taken to exploring zen moments. I’m not quite sure how to describe a perfect zen moment. I think a zen moment is when everything manifests as holy. Holiness, for me, is a realization that I don’t completely understand my life yet. While life seems Ikea and managing personalities through words, it really isn’t. Life is a collection of holiness; a gathering of zen moments.
I was at a Vietnamese restaurant the other day with my boss, her boss, and her boss’ boss. That’s a lot of bosses. They were talking and I was looking at the waitress. The waitress was one of those small, shy Asian girls with a hint of breasts poking through her shirt and the smallest mounds of hips pushing against her skirt. Her hair hung lifelessly in front of her unusually large eyes. She wasn’t attractive, but there was something about the way she smiled while setting a table. I found it fascinating that she would smile while doing something so mundane; as if she knew something about living that I didn’t. I wanted to talk to her to see why she smiled while setting chopsticks in front of white women with too much make-up.
The waitress was still on my mind after I left the restaurant and followed middle aged women back to work. She was still on my mind when I sat in front of my computer and readied myself for an afternoon of meetings.
She made me smile. Holy.
So, where are the soft and drinking melodies of the soul?
I’ve taken to exploring zen moments. I’m not quite sure how to describe a perfect zen moment. I think a zen moment is when everything manifests as holy. Holiness, for me, is a realization that I don’t completely understand my life yet. While life seems Ikea and managing personalities through words, it really isn’t. Life is a collection of holiness; a gathering of zen moments.
I was at a Vietnamese restaurant the other day with my boss, her boss, and her boss’ boss. That’s a lot of bosses. They were talking and I was looking at the waitress. The waitress was one of those small, shy Asian girls with a hint of breasts poking through her shirt and the smallest mounds of hips pushing against her skirt. Her hair hung lifelessly in front of her unusually large eyes. She wasn’t attractive, but there was something about the way she smiled while setting a table. I found it fascinating that she would smile while doing something so mundane; as if she knew something about living that I didn’t. I wanted to talk to her to see why she smiled while setting chopsticks in front of white women with too much make-up.
The waitress was still on my mind after I left the restaurant and followed middle aged women back to work. She was still on my mind when I sat in front of my computer and readied myself for an afternoon of meetings.
She made me smile. Holy.
1 Comments:
G,
When the oppressive disease called CORP-RATE starts slackening its grip around your ethereal neck, mind slipping a line or two to let us know that you're still alive?
Avast, matey.
Rosencrantz
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