Big Sur and the Oranges of Hieronymus Bosch (4 page)

BOOK: Big Sur and the Oranges of Hieronymus Bosch
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How illustrative, this attitude, of the woeful resignation men and women
succumb to! Surely every one realizes, at some point along the way, that he is capable of
living a far better life than the one he has chosen. What stays him, usually, is the fear of
the sacrifices involved. (Even to relinquish his chains seems like a sacrifice.) Yet everyone
knows that nothing is accomplished without sacrifice.

The longing for paradise, whether here on earth or in the beyond, has almost
ceased to be. Instead of an
idée-force
it has become an
idée fixe
. From a
potent myth it has degenerated into a taboo. Men will sacrifice their lives to bring about a
better world—whatever that may mean—but they will not budge an inch to attain paradise. Nor
will they struggle to create a bit of paradise in the hell they find themselves. It is so much
easier, and gorier, to make revolution, which means, to put it simply, establishing another, a
different, status quo. If paradise were realizable—this is the classic retort!—it would no
longer be paradise.

What is one to say to a man who insists on making his own prison?

There is a type of individual who, after finding what he considers
a paradise, proceeds to pick flaws in it. Eventually this man’s paradise
becomes even worse than the hell from which he had escaped.

Certainly paradise, whatever, wherever it be, contains flaws. (Paradisiacal
flaws, if you like.) If it did not, it would be incapable of drawing the hearts of men
or
angels.

The windows of the soul are infinite, we are told. And it is through the eyes
of the soul that paradise is visioned. If there are flaws in your paradise, open more windows!
Vision is entirely a creative faculty: it uses the body and the mind as the navigator uses his
instruments. Open and alert, it matters little whether one finds a supposed short cut to the
Indies—or discovers a new world. Everything is begging to be discovered, not accidentally, but
intuitively. Seeking intuitively, one’s destination is never in a beyond of time or space but
always here and now. If we are always arriving and departing, it is also true that we are
eternally anchored. One’s destination is never a place but rather a new way of looking at
things. Which is to say that there are no limits to vision. Similarly, there are no limits to
paradise. Any paradise worth the name can sustain all the flaws in creation and remain
undiminished, untarnished.

If I have entered upon a vein which I must confess is one not frequently
discussed here, I am nevertheless certain that it is one which secretly engages the minds of
many members of the community.

Everyone who has come here in search of a new way of life has made a complete
change-about in his daily routine. Nearly every one has come from afar, usually from a big
city. It meant abandoning a job and a mode of life which was detestable and insufferable. To
what degree each one has found “new life” can be estimated only by the efforts he or she put
forth. Some, I suspect, would have found “it” even had they remained where they were.

The most important thing I have witnessed, since coming here,
is the transformation people have wrought in their own being. Nowhere have I seen
individuals work so earnestly and assiduously on themselves. Nor so successfully. Yet nothing
is taught or preached here, at least overtly. Some have made the effort and failed. Happily
for the rest of us, I should say. But even these who failed gained something. For one thing,
their outlook on life was altered, enlarged if not “improved.” And what could be better than
for the teacher to become his own pupil, or the preacher his own convert?

In a paradise you don’t preach or teach. You practice the perfect life—or you
relapse.

There seems to be an unwritten law here which insists that you accept what you
find and like it, profit by it, or you are cast out. Nobody does the rejecting, please
understand. Nobody, no group here, would crave such authority. No, the place itself, the
elements which make it, do that. It’s the law, as I say. And it is a just law which works harm
to no one. To the cynical-minded it may sound like the same old triumph of our dear status
quo. But the enthusiast knows that it is precisely the fact that there is no status quo here
which makes for its paradisiacal quality.

No, the law operates because that which makes for paradise can not and will
not assimilate that which makes for hell. How often it is said that we make our own heaven and
our own hell. And how little it is taken to heart! Yet the truth prevails, whether we believe
in it or not.

Paradise or no paradise, I have the very definite impression that the people
of this vicinity are striving to live up to the grandeur and nobility which is such an
integral part of the setting. They behave as if it were a privilege to live here, as if it
were by an act of grace they found themselves here. The place itself is so overwhelmingly
bigger, greater, than anyone could hope to make it that it engenders a humility and reverence
not frequently met with in Americans. There being nothing to improve on in the surroundings,
the tendency is to set about improving oneself.

It is of course true that individuals have undergone
tremendous changes, broadened their vision, altered their natures, in hideous, thwarting
surroundings—prisons, ghettos, concentration camps, and so on. Only a very rare individual
elects to
remain
in such places. The man who has seen the light follows the light.
And the light usually leads him to the place where he can function most effectively, that is,
where he will be of most use to his fellow-men. In this sense, it matters little whether it be
darkest Africa or the Himalayan heights. God’s work can be done anywhere, so to say.

We have all met the soldier who has been overseas. And we all know that each
one has a different story to relate. We are all like returned soldiers. We have all been
somewhere, spiritually speaking, and we have either benefited by the experience or been
worsted by it. One man says: “Never again!” Another says: “Let it come! I’m ready for
anything!” Only the fool hopes to repeat an experience; the wise man knows that
every
experience is to be viewed as a blessing. Whatever we try to deny or reject is precisely what
we have need of; it is our very need which often paralyzes us, prevents us from welcoming a
(good or bad) experience.

I come back once again to those individuals who came here full of needs and
who fled after a time because “it” was not what they hoped to find, or because “they” were not
what they thought themselves to be. None of them, from what I have learned, has yet found it
or himself. Some returned to their former masters in the manner of slaves unable to support
the privileges and responsibilities of freedom. Some found their way into mental retreats.
Some became derelicts. Others simply surrendered to the villainous status quo.

I speak as if they had been marked by the whip. I do not mean to be cruel or
vindictive. What I wish to say quite simply is that none of them, in my humble opinion, is a
whit happier, a whit better off, an inch advanced in any respect. They will all continue to
talk about their Big Sur adventure for the rest of their lives—wistfully, regretfully, or
elatedly, as occasion dictates. In the hearts
of some, I know, is the
profound hope that their children will display more courage, more perseverance, more integrity
than they themselves did. But do they not overlook something? Are not their children, as the
product of self-confessed failures, already condemned? Have they not been contaminated by the
virus of “security”?

The most difficult thing to adjust to, apparently, is peace and contentment.
As long as there is something to fight, people seem able to brave all manner of hardships.
Remove the element of struggle, and they are like fish out of water. Those who no longer have
anything to worry about will, in desperation, often take on the burdens of the world. This not
through idealism but because they must have something to do, or at least something to talk
about. Were these empty souls truly concerned about the plight of their fellow-men they would
consume themselves in the flames of devotion. One need hardly go beyond his own doorstep to
discover a realm large enough to exhaust the energies of a giant, or better, a saint.

Naturally, the more attention one gives to the deplorable conditions outside
the less one is able to enjoy what peace and liberty he possesses. Even if it be heaven we
find ourselves in, we can render it suspect and dubious.

Some will say they do not wish to
dream
their lives away. As if life
itself were not a dream, a very real dream from which there is no awakening! We pass from one
state of dream to another: from the dream of sleep to the dream of waking, from the dream of
life to the dream of death. Whoever has enjoyed a good dream never complains of having wasted
his time. On the contrary, he is delighted to have partaken of a reality which serves to
heighten and enhance the reality of everyday.

The oranges of Bosch’s “Millennium,” as I said before, exhale
this dreamlike reality which constantly eludes us and which is the very substance of
life. They are far more delectable, far more potent, than the Sunkist oranges we daily consume
in the naive belief that they are laden with wonder-working vitamins. The millennial oranges
which Bosch created restore the soul; the ambiance in which he suspended them is the
everlasting one of spirit become real.

Every creature, every object, every place has its own ambiance. Our world
itself possesses an ambiance which is unique. But worlds, objects, creatures, places, all have
this in common: they are ever in a state of transmutation. The supreme delight of dream lies
in this transformative power. When the personality liquefies, so to speak, as it does so
deliciously in dream, and the very nature of one’s being is alchemized, when form and
substance, time and space, become yielding and elastic, responsive and obedient to one’s
slightest wish, he who awakens from his dream knows beyond all doubt that the imperishable
soul which he calls his own is but a vehicle of this eternal element of change.

In waking life, when all is well and cares fall away, when the intellect is
silenced and we slip into reverie, do we not surrender blissfully to the eternal flux, float
ecstatically on the still current of life? We have all experienced moments of utter
forgetfulness when we knew ourselves as plant, animal, creature of the deep or denizen of the
air. Some of us have even known moments when we were as the gods of old. Most every one has
known
one
moment in his life when he felt so good, so thoroughly attuned, that he has
been on the point of exclaiming:
“Ah, now is the time to die!”
What is it lurks here
in the very heart of euphoria? The thought that it will not, can not last? The sense of an
ultimate? Perhaps. But I think there is another, deeper aspect to it. I think that in such
moments we are trying to tell ourselves what we have long known but ever refuse to accept—that
living and dying are one, that all is one, and that it makes no difference whether we live a
day or a thousand years.

Confucius put it this way: “If a man sees Truth in the
morning, he may die in the evening without regret.”

In the beginning Big Sur looked to me like an ideal place in which to work.
Today, though I enjoy working when I can, I look upon it with other eyes. Whether I work or
whether I don’t has come to assume less and less importance. I have had here some of the most
bitter experiences of my life; I have also known here some of the most exalted moments. Sweet
or bitter, I am now convinced that all experience is enriching and rewarding. Above all,
instructive.

In these past ten years I have talked to hundreds and hundreds of individuals
from all walks of life. Most callers, it seems to me, come to unload their problems.
Occasionally I succeed in handing a man back his problems—and saddling him with a few new
ones, weightier, knottier ones than he brought.

Many who come to pay me a visit make me the recipient of gifts, all sorts of
gifts, from money to books, food, drink, clothing, even postage stamps. In return I can only
offer the gift of myself. But all this is of little moment. What intrigues me is that, living
in a nominally isolated spot, the world is closer to my door than if I were in the thick of
it. It is not necessary for me to read the daily paper nor listen in on the news broadcasts.
Whatever I need to know about conditions “out there” is brought to me, combed and sifted, in
person.

And how very much the same it all is! Why drag one’s carcass around?
“Stay
put and watch the world go round!”
That’s what I frequently tell myself.

Here I feel compelled to touch on a matter which, though highly personal, may
nevertheless be of interest to “all and sundry.” As a writer of some repute—perhaps
dubious
repute—I naturally number
among my callers many young
or would-be writers. When I learn of their aims and purpose, in choosing authorship, I am
obliged to put myself the most scathing questions. In what way, I ask myself, do I really
differ from these fledglings? What have I gained, turning out one book after another, that
they lack? And why should I encourage them when all they do is augment my own honest
doubts?

To elucidate … all these young men (and women), as I once did myself, desire
nothing more, nothing better, than to write what they wish to write and to be read by as many
people as possible. They want to express themselves, they say. Very good. (“And what’s to
hinder?” say I to myself.) After they have expressed themselves, they want to be recognized
and commended for their efforts.
Naturally
. (“Who’s to prevent it?”) And being
recognized, being accepted, they want to enjoy the fruits of their labor. (“Human,
all-too-human.”)
But—
and here is the question, the vital one: Do you, my dear young
enthusiasts, have any idea what it means when you say “the fruits of one’s labor”? Have you
ever heard of “bitter fruit”? Do you not know that with recognition, or “success,” if you want
to call it that, come all the evils in creation? Do you realize that, in accomplishing your
purpose, you will never be permitted to reap the reward you dream of? No doubt you picture to
yourself a quiet home in the country, a loving wife who understands you, and a bevy of happy,
contented children. You visualize yourself turning out masterpiece after masterpiece in a
setting where all runs like clockwork.

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