chaos and waste

in the fields

Know the killers by their words. They use too many, and invert them. They speak a language of chaos to stir confusion. Once frothed to full foment, they descend from their towers to feed and grow fat on the blood of lambs. By morning, they have disappeared to clean themselves and then reappear above the carnage, lamenting. This mess, this mess, they say. For shame, they say, and lob another theory into the crowd, the usual balloons of enhanced security and maximum efficiency. These float on the raised hands of the assembled, who cheer.  The speakers smile, digesting last night’s feast. Tonight, repeat.

Meanwhile, a haggard band of constant shepherds gather under cover of remaining trees, to tremble before the lives remaining, and abide.

Swells

Hello chaos, my old friend.

Say a tide is rising, and fast. At the shore this is a matter of life and death. But from a great distance there it is again, the same sea.

This morning, something tentative creeps in, a primal anxiety no doubt connected to next week’s return to school, and a sense of how quickly the pace and volume of everything will soon feel out of hand.

One learns early on to keep such observations to oneself in mixed company because if overheard by someone older or a man, this someone may feel compelled to remind you that you control the pace and if it feels out of hand you must simply set a new one. Often this admonishment is happening during a passing period bell, active shooter drill, or rush to use the bathroom between alarms.

At the onslaught of these regular doses of another’s “teachable moment” it is polite to nod as if this is the first time encountering such sage advice and sometimes when nodding while maintaining a facial expression of earnest seriousness, it is not uncommon to hear the voice of a student objecting, “They tryna gaslight you!” and feel awash in a mischievous joy that is not easy to describe.

When the inevitable updates come about who died, is dying, or has disappeared, one’s grief or concern must never publicly extend beyond the prescribed moment of silence. This understanding is critical to the choreography of this theatre. “Compartmentalize!” a principal urged us last year, in the wake of the most recent tragedy. He was one of the good ones so we returned with wan smiles of solidarity. He is gone now. March on, march on.

The Sea, the Sea: The title of the Iris Murdoch novel I am finishing in these final days, set in a landscape entirely different from this one––rocky coastline, weedy paths, long hours of solitude, and the drinking of imported claret at midday. And yet, with people arriving and leaving, whose unpredictable weathers nevertheless follow recognizable patterns.

Here are people who miss the quiet when it shatters, who want to remind others that they may take some of it with them, anytime. Who want to feel as though some measure of presumed authority has been earned. Who know better than to go around unsuspecting. Who are aware that part of what is happening in moments when one feels the rug tugging from beneath the feet involves some sleight of hand.

Who are nevertheless bewildered by it all, even as they walk back out there, pretending to have seen it all before.

Exit mobile version
%%footer%%