Authors: Juan Pastor
If
I am boring you please humor me. This is honestly
what I thought of as I lay bleeding, and so I tell it to you. If you
were full of hurt, and I thought you might die, I would listen to
you if you wanted me to.
I
often think of my rosary as my "worry beads" and the
crucifix itself as my "worry stone". During times of stress or
anxiety, I retrieve the Salvador from His place of rest, and rub
my fingers gently upon His form.
You
will probably think this sacrilegious, but ever since
I grew tetas, I have liked the feeling of having Jesús nestled
between them, as if I were his girl, and He lay His head there
for comfort. But then, just above the pink jade crucifix of
Jesús is His Madre, forged in silver, holding him when he was a
pequeño infante. She keeps a watchful eye on him lest he
grow up and become a little too fascinated with the carnal
aspects of life.
At some point I must have either fallen asleep, passed
out, or died. At the time I wasn’t sure which. Since I saw the
Virgen Maria, I assumed I had died. She talked to me for quite
a while. She told me I wasn’t dead. It would be a long long
time before I died. She said she had work for me to do. She
said she was taking Rosaria with her, so not to be upset when
I woke up and Rosaria was gone. She said she was taking
Rosaria’s soul to a safe place, and that Rosaria would not need
her body anymore, so she was giving Rosaria’s body to the
lobos. When I started to cry, the Virgen Maria hugged me and
begged me not to be sad. She said I would be much more
upset if she let Rosaria’s body stay in the desert where she
died. She said Rosaria’s body would live forever in the lobos of
the desert, and that that is a good thing.
She said when I woke up, there would be a large white
lobo bitch, an alpha loba as she called it, near me, to protect
me, to help me get better, and to help me survive in the
desert. She said when I knew everything Alpha Loba knew, it
would be almost impossible for anything bad to happen to me
ever again.
Then the Virgen Maria kept me company, and talked to
me through most of the night. She told me things that made it
hard for me to believe she was the Virgen Maria. I began to
wonder if it was Diablo, tempting me in the desert, like he did
to Jesús. And I worried because I was in no position to resist.
The Virgen Maria must have read my thoughts because she
said that the desert is where the devil tempted Christ, but it is
almost always in the desert where divinity is born. It is very
unlikely that Diablo would say such a thing, but then, devils
can be very clever.
The Virgen Maria knew my name. She called me la
pequeña María. She said I was named after her. How would
Diablo know that? She knew how old I was, 18, almost 19. She
said she had given birth to Jesús when she was younger than I
am now. She said she was a naïve young girl then, but she had
wised up considerably about the world since.
When I asked her if she had really been a virgin, she
simply repeated that she had been a naïve young girl then.
And then she told me she was here to help me wise up. She
said after she watched what men did to her son, and no‐one
helped, and no‐one did anything about it, she actually
wondered if there really was a God. She said she was tired of
intervening for men to gain favor with God. She said she was
tired of hearing about how one should suffer gratefully to
become a saint. She said she was tired of hearing about
turning the other cheek.
She said the oppressed, the persecuted, the victimized,
the poor, the hungry, have every right to do something about
their condition here on earth.
“You don’t sound much like the Virgen Maria I learned
about in church.” I tell her.
“I am no longer the Maria you learned about in
church.” The Virgen Maria said. Do you see that wall over
there? It was built by men who are, as you would say,
estupido. You know the saying of your people, no se puede
arreglar estupido (you can’t fix stupid)? Stupidity is like a
dilapidated house about to collapse on itself. One can be
patient, and wait for the collapse. Or one can help it along.
Every once in a while, when you can escape from the work you
can come and remove one more "stupid block" from the
foundation that holds up the dilapidated house of stupidity.
You will live to hear the trumpets, and see the wall come
tumbling down.”
There is something very seductive about the way the
Virgen Maria talks. I have never known anyone to use
language so effectively, so seductively. Which is what makes
me still wonder if it wasn’t Diablo posing as the Virgen Maria.
I know English pretty well, but not as well as I know
Spanish. I have noticed when I try to say things in English, I can
never express my thoughts as well as if I use Spanish. Yet if I
try to be technical about something, it seems that there are
better words in English than there are in Spanish. I have often
wondered such things as which language is the hardest to tell
a lie in? Which language is the easiest to tell a lie in? It
sometimes seems that languages that better communicate
matters of the heart are the hardest to lie in. And the more
technical, and more complex, one can make something, the
easier it is to lie. I’m not saying one can’t outright lie in
Spanish, but I think it is harder to deceive through complexity
in Spanish. When one person speaks to another, it is an
attempt to “communicate”. That is, it is an attempt to
“commune” with that other person’s mind or soul. But there
is
also
pseudo‐communication,
which
isn’t
really
communication at all, but a pretense at it. Formal speaking,
ritual speaking, rhetoric used to induce a particular action in
another,
argument,
subterfuge,
these
are
all
pseudo‐
communication.
What
pseudo‐communication
does
is
immediately destroy all hope of real communication. And
certain languages have much more developed and much more
advanced vocabularies of pseudo‐communication than others.
I honestly think the hardest languages to pseudo‐
communicate in are ancient Greek and Latin, and that is why
they were used by learned men, universally, for so many
centuries. But for some reason, civilized man decided to
abandon persuasion through reason, and decided to go with
deceitful rhetoric, and that is why the classic languages were
abandoned. The thing is, Spanish draws pretty heavily from
the classical languages, especially Latin. But then again, so
does Law in most cultures. And if there is anything the Law is,
it is pseudo‐communication raised to an art form, and then
turned into code. It is basically the bastardization of what was
once one of the purist of languages. I have to make myself
remember
that
Spanish
was
the
language
of
the
conquistadores and the inquisitores. So maybe I don’t know as
much about language as I think I do. I do know that Spanish
doesn’t belong to the conquerors and torturers any more. It
belongs to people like me. Can a language choose who it
wants to belong to? I say yes.
One thing I have learned in my brief time on Earth is
that if something is easy to believe in, it probably isn’t the
truth. And the Virgen Maria that appeared to me was making
it pretty hard to believe she was the Virgen Maria. But, in the
end, after all the doubt, after weighing all the pros and cons
very analytically, after thinking about something til one’s brain
hurts, we all do what everyone has always done. We kneel
down at some altar or another, admit we are still fairly stupid,
and put our fate in the hands of some higher power. We take
that leap of faith. At least I do. Although, I must admit, and I’m
doing this metaphorically (a Greek word) I always make sure
the bungee chord is well connected to me, and to whatever
I’m jumping off of.
“You don’t believe me, do you?” The Virgen Maria asks.
“I don’t not believe you.” I tell her.
“Do you believe in God?” The Virgen Maria asks.
“Yes.”
“No you don’t.” The Virgen Maria says. “I can read your
mind.”
“I believe in God like I believe in truth and beauty. They
are concepts that always come a hair’s breadth away from
being objectively real. They always exist in some degree of
magnitude that never quite reaches 100%. But as long as just
one person believes in them, they exist.”
“Someone’s done way too much thinking for such a
young girl. Aren’t you supposed to be thinking of cute boys
and pretty dresses?” The Virgen Maria asks.
“I suppose.”
“And what if that one person dies?” The Virgen Maria
asks.
“Then the concepts revert back to being memes, and
start looking for the next person they can be hosted in.”
“Now that Rosaria is gone”, the Virgen Maria says, “the
memes will be looking for a new host.”
“You are one of those memes, aren’t you?” I ask the
Virgen Maria. “What is it you want me to do?”
“I want you to send a memo to Diablo.”
"What is it you want to say in the memo?" I ask.
"The last laugh ‐ it is mine!" The Virgen Maria says.
Now I ask myself, "Would Diablo himself say such a
thing?"
of
deserts as dead and quiet. And they can seem so, especially
at midday. But a desert really is very alive and “sonorous”.
And none moreso than the Sonora, therefore its name.
Most
of the sound is the vocalization of life. Animals do
not use words like humans do. Animals do not use the sheer
volume of rich and varied sound combinations that humans do
to express the complexity of human lives.
Words
aren’t the concrete things we think they are
anyway. The meanings of words change. We construct our
belief systems on the building blocks of words. But words
have a tendency to turn into mist and disappear. Our world is
built on words, but then the words get yanked out from under
us, and we find ourselves falling into the abyss.
I
feel the very surface of the earth open to swallow me.
I float weightless as the crust of the earth closes above me,
and cuts off the light. The fall makes me nauseous and dizzy.
When I hit bottom, I open my eyes, and find myself back in the
desert again.
A
wolf stands before me. The rest of the pack stands
where Rosaria had been, but there is no longer a trace of
Rosaria. The wolf that stands near me will not let the pack of
wolves come any closer. The wolf near me does not snarl. It
doesn't seem to me to communicate in any way that it does
not want me touched, but none of the other wolves approach.
It doesn’t need words. It doesn’t even need to make a sound.
Imagine a human being not having to say anything to get any
response out of fellow humans. This is true power.
The
Sonoran Wolf is really a Mexican Wolf that has
managed to survive in the harsh extremes of the Sonora. The
Mexican Wolf is the smallest Gray Wolf subspecies in North
America. Supposedly. The wolf before me is enormous. Its
right ear is slightly lacerated, and it has a scar on its face. It
resembles a very well fed coyote more than a wolf, but it is
wolflike in that it has a broader head, a thicker neck, and
longer ears. And unlike the rest of the wolves that stand apart
in the pack, the wolf near me is whitish grey. It is close enough
for me to determine its sex. It is female. It is old. It is the alpha
of the pack. I do not see an alpha male in the pack.