Chapter 6 from Memories and Musings of a
Post-Postmodern Nomadic Mystic Madman
The World Is Not
What They Say It Is
The
circle of cropped grass was expanding bit-by-bit by hours of frantic
if rhythmic efforts in a semi-concentric patchwork of red willows and
tall grasses and wild mint, all save the scrawny stick willows hewn
to just above the root immediately surrounding the hut, which grows
as the grasses recede. A hairy man bending down bare-chested, blade
in one hand and a bundle of long grasses in the other, utters
resonant intonations of an ancient tongue as he goes about his
labors. Ancient words rhythmically chanted in time to the rhythms of
his work as the tall grasses are harvested, as has been done from
time immemorial to fulfill a need for shelter, with a similarly
primeval respect for ritual. This seeming anachronistic figure is
simply cutting grass to enclose a small thatched hut as a haven from
the oncoming cold of winter, though indeed might evoke presumptions
of a prehistoric context. Overt appearances, however, are often but
a single view of a multifaceted formation or a compound
manifestation.
The
gathered bunches of grass are bent towards the base, then woven into
the willow-stick frame and left to hang like shaggy blond hairs on
the head of a Nordic wildman. Slowly the gaps are filled, and the
tangle of sticks and straw begin to resemble a home, if humble and
somewhat cramped. The
red-bearded-long-haired-thin-framed-pale-skinned man pauses to assess
his labors. He scratches his head and then his balls, unassuming and
not the least self-conscious (though perhaps a bit self-aware). No
one is watching. No one, save a few of his fellow tribesmen and
women, birds, beavers, muskrats and mice know the whereabouts of his
small abode, concealed in a maze of willows just a few yards from the
river, framed a few steps from the water.
The
hut is shaped like an igloo, except unlike an igloo the door is
constructed on the side of the dome, and the odd structure is built
around a larger species of willow tree, concealed just a few dozen
yards off of the paved trail at the edge of Optimist Park. Joggers
in their Nike running shoes, cyclists, in-line skaters and
power-walkers regularly pass by the unobtrusive entrance to the
narrow winding pathway that passes through the thicket and leads to
this partially domesticated wildman’s humble home.
Bunches
of sticks tied together with grass are hung as odd ornamentations in
the red willows that grow straight towards the sky from the moist
ground. Glow in the dark stars and other oddities dangle on strands
of hemp, decorations designed to delight those with whimsical
imaginations, and to deter the meddling of those who might not take
so kindly to a squat situated in the midst of a public park, a
homestead hidden just upstream from the West Garfield Street bridge
and only a couple of minutes walk from regular and titled homes of
stucco and brick and plastic-siding wherein regular tax-paying
Americans spend their tired evenings watching glowing screens
displaying other people’s lives, factual or fictitious, that are
generally more interesting than their own.
The
hut has a fireplace built with rocks left over from a city project
along the paved greenbelt trail, a counter top attached by hemp
string to one side, a plastic crate half-buried in the cool clay
underneath the counter for food storage, and a single mattress folded
lengthwise to make a couch sitting atop some wood pallets. Under the
extension off the dome is a double-mattress elevated on pallets as a
bed. The mattress is covered neatly with sheets and several blankets
as insulation from the increasing cold of night.
Underneath
thatching, the ceiling is covered in a layer of scavenged bubble-wrap
to seal against rain and melting snow. One long window is left
uncovered by straw to match the suns progress across the southern
sky. A two-burner alcohol burning stove sits atop the counter, and
various utensils dangle from the woven willow wall above. A small
kitschy picture hangs over the hearth with an inscription that reads,
“One touch of nature makes the whole world kin,” a quote from
Shakespeare’s Troilus
and Cressida.
A transferred plastic image of a sparrow on a tree-branch adhering to
one side of the decal script completes the embellishment of this
faux-wood panel.
During
my small austerities building this abode in the most-of-the-time
solitude of this section of the river, biding my time with various
yogic practices, I began to find the boundaries between
self-and-other dissolving as never before, tejas
(“fire”) well stoked from sun salutations, mantra
and trance whilst harvesting the tall grass and thatching. On one
occasion as I was feeling particularly high from intense chanting and
the onset of a beautiful sunset, I shifted from mantra to pop, and
started to gleefully sing “all you need is love . . .” and
imagined in my ecstatic trance that other souls could hear or at
least feel my jubilant devotions and blissful state of yoga. A train
started into town about that moment, and I decided to see if I could
share my joyful intentions with the engineer. I swear to you, after
I sang in both voice and mind “all you need is love,” the train’s
horn sounded in perfect time to the following five beats of this
well-known anthem, “du, du, du du du.”
This
strange construction was home to a displaced wildman for somewhere
around three moons, till as so often happens to wild peoples the
authorities of the so-called civilized folk came to roust him from
even this unassuming hovel.
___________________________________
Sitting
and sipping suds at the historic Buckhorn Bar, I noticed a blond and
a redhead I’d not seen there before. The blond introduced herself
as Blair, the redhead as Catherine (though whether with a “K” or
a “C” I can’t say). They told me they’d met in Africa whilst
serving in the Peace Corps. The redhead said she was from my
mother’s father’s hometown, a mostly Mennonite community in
Kansas. She said she wasn’t a Mennonite. I don’t recall where
the blond was from. A skinny sharply dressed fellow was bouncing
between the two, seemingly weighing his options for later in the
evening.
After
another drink or two, the four of us made our way to the “wigwam,”
as I had come to call my hut in the swamp by the Laramie River. I
had some shwag to smoke (Mexican-grown compressed marijuana, for
those not hip to the jargon) and invited these new acquaintances to
join me on a jaunt over the footbridge and to the Near Westside and
through Optimist Park to my “primitive” abode.
I
swung open the thatched woven-willow door, and we each ducked under
the door frame to make our way into the wigwam. I started a fire in
the stone and mud fireplace and lit some candles, and we enjoyed some
smoke, passing a pipe and coughing and laughing. We had each
consumed copious quantities of alcohol, and as there were two of each
gender and orientation near the same age (at least by all
appearances), the natural coupling ensued. Catherine and I began to
make-out rather madly, whilst the other pair half-heartedly kissed a
bit. Catherine decided to spend the night after Blair and her
partner had departed, rather soon after our passionate drunken
tongue-tangling had begun.
Not
the next morning, but the morning after, I awoke to a loud if
shaky-voiced proclamation and command proceeding from the periphery
of my “yard.”
“Laramie
police! This is the police! Come out! Come out right now!”
Before
going to sleep the previous night I had heard the nigh unmistakable
sound of a squad car door slamming shut—cop car doors make a
particular and discernible din as they are closed, if you grow
accustomed to listening. I slid out of bed and pulled on a pair of
pants. The shout was repeated.
“Just
a minute, I gotta put some clothes on,” said I.
As
I opened the door and made my way outside, I was confronted with the
sight of a fully uniformed cop half-crouched with his pistol drawn.
“Put
that silliness away,” I said with a wave of my hand.
“Oh
. . . sorry,” he uttered, seemingly a bit embarrassed at his
overreaction.
I
suppose the bundles of sticks dangling from the willows on the
pathway might have startled him, perhaps with images from The
Blair Witch Project in
mind as he made his way through the winding willow-lined pathway. I
should perhaps have told him, Blair had only stayed very briefly at
the wigwam, and had departed two nights previous. I was officially
evicted by the head of City Parks a few days later, but my endeavors
at least received a nice front page write-up in the Boomerang titled
“Wigwam Worries,” and a follow up, too.
Several
days later, “homeless” once again, I spent the night at
Catherine’s apartment. We had met at the bar, and went to her
place to smoke a bowl of some nuggets—homegrown Cannabis
indica this
time, the dank. During an intimate moment later that night, as I was
looking up and into her eyes, something happened that I cannot quite
explain to this very day. Gazing at her face mere inches from mine,
her visage suddenly morphed into the visage of the last woman I had
known in that precise position, and then became again the face of the
woman I assumed I was sharing intimacies with. I said not a word,
though my eyes may have dilated and my mouth may have fallen agape in
surprise. Then gazing down at me, eyes ablaze, she asked or stated
rather matter-of-factly, “Oh, you saw my face change!?”
“You’re
a fucking shape-shifter!” said I—no pun intended.
“Ah,
cheap magic trick,” she replied with a broad smile.
I
once watched a shape-shifting lycanthrope run across the road on the
Navajo (Diné) Reservation in Arizona, slammed on the brakes of my
truck to avoid hitting the beast. Less than twenty yards or so in
front of the pickup, this large hairless green-glowing elongated
canine creature with human-type musculature scampered across the dirt
road and into a ditch. I’ve seen many a mangy coyote and have a
respectable knowledge of wildlife, and this was nothing yet described
by modern science.
One
of the Diné kids that had guided me to a Hopi lady’s house to buy
some shwag told me, in response to my surprised utterance, “What
the fuck was that!?” that the strange creature we had viewed was a
“Skinwalker.” The Diné believe that shamans who have dealt with
dark-magic sometimes acquire the ability to morph into these
lycanthropic, part-coyote creatures. I have also encountered other
suspicious persons I suspected to be of the shape-shifting sort, on
at least one other occasion. Perhaps it also warrants mention that I
once awoke after a night with another quite beautiful and rather
crazy lover, squinting at the sunshine only to gaze down to notice a
suspicious and rather large suction mark with a scab in the middle on
both my forearms, which left some rather funky temporary scars (not
sure whether t’was she or her cat was the vampire). Never before
or since, however, have I encountered such a reality shattering
phenomenon at such close range as that night in Catherine’s bed.
The experience had first hand with said wild shapeshifting redhead
has convinced me, perhaps more than any other single momentary
happening, that the world is not what they say it is.
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