WHAT RIDES YOUR MINDS

1

Didn’t even notice we had been going up the entire time. Little cowlicks of canyons arched up to take my eyes off the road. Driving for a long time takes your mind off of the worry. Mistakes can happen, why don’t we take the burden of statistics off of the next fellow who’s actually trying to get somewhere. 

I suppose we’re on a schedule and we have things to get home to. I’m just saying, if I accidentally drove us off the road — and we survived — that would be an amazing story. If I drove us off the road — and we died… identical story, but we do not get to watch people reacting as we tell it. More legendary if someone else is telling that tale. So you’d have to rely on having a vantage point from Beyond to enjoy people’s remembrance. 

Of course, they might not even tell the story. In which case, we’d absolutely prefer to have lived to tell it. 

Do not read me as careless. This is the path my mind goes as we drive, drive, drive. I’m observing that mistakes occur. If we are that mistake, it would in a way, mean that the next guy this specific statistic was coming for would receive the gift of life! All thanks to us veering off a cliff like a tourist.

You can see why I wouldn’t have noticed that we were going up. Prune Creek, Wyoming ends up being 13,000 feet in the air. The first sign I noticed was 9,000 feet. I can measure it in thoughts.

———

Long ago I had worked with a product that required accurate measurement. Paul and Tracy were friends of mine. Mostly Tracy. Tracy became my boss at an old server gig I was fiercely neglecting at the time. Collegiate students worked along our side. Tracy and I were around the same age, faintly reconsidering if we needed this type of work. I began neglecting the work even more because I was zeroed in on Tracy. This can be considered careless. 

Tracy became friendly with the fun party of the staff. We went to a neighboring bar after one shift and made out in front of coworkers. A mistake, but feels good at the time. Both Tracy and I had forgotten about Paul, her fiancee. Remembering Paul would not have stopped me. But maybe Tracy.

What I actually did for real money required accurate measurement. My accurate measurements would require that I delivered inaccurate amounts to the clientele. I, like most measurers, figure out that not everyone is looking for an accurate measurement by the time the product is in hand. They look for trust. 

Perceived trustworthiness. 

I was some sort of trustworthy. Tracy and I never hooked up again. But we became the closest friends. She got me a promotion. I was also able to measure for her and Paul over and over again, amassing a decent living for the first time in my young adult life. Until one night, they measured my measurements. Called me while I was in the middle of depleting measurements. I was so hurt that someone would do something like this to someone else. How could they? How could I?

I lost touch with those two. I wonder if Tracy ever let it slip about that one time. They got married a while ago, and that’s good.

———

The Tracy thing wasn’t even that big of a deal at the time. We are 1,500 miles and 8 years away, here with my own life-partner and bovine horizon. Unobstructed, high-altitude sunlight gets beneath the eyebrows of this rippling plateau. It’s littered with cows. Whose cows are these? Where do these cows belong

These green-gold lands cannot be manicured, but appear groomed. They give fluidity to each verdant stretch that stops abruptly against well-placed rock walls. Cows look toward the road to watch humanity pass each other by. It feels desolate. But no, that’s not true. I want it to feel desolate as though it’s only us up here. If it were desolate, there wouldn’t be opposing cars coming one by over the horizon. These cars are making space so we can get a chance at seeing some Moose. Meese? You gotta get up high to see these guys.

“Oh stop, their hooves are not that big,” Gloria stopped her husband’s embellishment.

“Yes they are! They’ll stomp ya to deathHank said stretching out his arms wide. “And they got antlers like this —” they went so wide his wrists flipped open, sprouting digits to complete the full extension.  

“They do not.” Gloria, said smiling. Then turned to me: “But. If you see one. You must absolutely get the hell away from there – because they actually will stomp you to death.”

“We were out there in Montana. Or maybe it was Wyoming. We’re hiking the trails and seeing all kinds of shit. We saw Grizzly Bears and Moose in the distance. Scary,” Hank grins, enjoying our attentiveness. “And my buddy, Dave, is a ways off the trail.”

He continues: “They’re huge. But in a way, they’re so big they blend in with the fuckin’ trees. Tall strong tree legs! We realized suddenly there’s a Moose right there in the wood, splitting the difference ‘tween us and Dave! 

“The moose turns toward Dave’s direction, starts moving that way. So Dave runs for the river in the opposite direction of where we were and jumps in, swimming for the other side. 

“When the moose steps in the water, it’s liek the Moose is ankle deep. But Dave is completely underwater, swimming for his life. The current doesn’t do a thing to the moose. But Dave is going diagonally up and away from both us and the moose, toward the opposite shore, thank God. 

“But the way that moose just stood against the current – coulda just ran in the river and fucked him up!” Hank shook his head with a syllabic chuckle. “We caught up with Dave up ahead on our trial, soaking. He was just smiling with big eyes. Said, ‘Close one!’” 

We laughed.

2

I hope to see one of these dinosaur-sized deer. Mostly for wonder’s sake. Brings me full circle back to veering off the road. What a story, to get stomped. A better story to be able to tell yourself, like we agreed. But a good story in any scenario. 

———

Shouldn’t I be more present? Maybe all humans wish this once they’re informed about Presence. Everything reminds me of something. Then there are the intrusive thoughts and negative memories meant for the evening that get set loose in my synapses all hours. It doesn’t ruin my day by any means, but it certainly takes me down a notch. Good to be humbled.

Prune Creek will have us at 13,000 feet in some cases. I’m all the way up here, thinking incessantly about down there. All my goings ons and preoccupations.

Finally I set eyes on a house. Is it a farmhouse if there’s no farm? Unless this is the farm. The entirety of Heaven’s Plateau, one of thousands or millions my eyes had never seen, and my media-drenched mind’s never dreamed. There are images on television and on the internet. But it turns out, some of those metaphors, exaggerations, and turns of phrase are true. The Grand Tetons are those Purple Mountains Majesty Upon The Fruited Plains. So suddenly the world becomes alien seeing some of these sights. And then alien all over again when seeing a familiar trace of humanity via this lonely house. 

So there are locals up here. I guess why wouldn’t there be? There was a road to get us here. All the roads through all the deserts and wide open mind-bending emptiness of the Great Plains. We seem to have plenty of space and food for people. Why does this need to be restricted? My easy guess: Power. There is blatantly ample space. I look at Kansas and I think, put everything here.

Is it possible to be this simple? We’ve done it in quite a few other places.

I don’t know enough about geopolitics and city planning to even imagine a better world. I hide from the politics and revel in the road. People have laid all these roads. The way we place a path, aiming in unknown directions until they are tread so many times we make that path permanent… 

Which leads me to believe: we are destined to make our mistakes. The frequency of same or similar missteps are predetermined. Once this road has been laid, we might have to traverse it one million times to reach this peak; only to realize our intended peace was not on top of the mountain but on the other side of it, near sea level.

“You are loud!” my best friend said.

“We’ve carried you out of this place before, you don’t remember?” my best friend recounted.

“Look at this picture, we fist-fought that night,” my best friend told me. 

He never tells these tales in a malicious way. It’s more like, “here’s a fact you might not know.”

Peppers are spicy as a way to defend themselves from certain animals. However birds don’t taste or feel capsaicin, so they munch, digest, and shit out seeds whole in a place where more peppers might bloom. My best friend is showing me how I was digested and shit out.

In my second life, I promised my best friend that this new idea I have for us will give us the ultimate freedom of creativity, just as long as we sacrifice our autonomy for the known future. We were leaders and loose cannons would become loyal followers. We’d both learn such a severe level of productivity and self discipline, it might cause harm to our personal relationships; a social expense we were both more than happy to cover. In some ways, this is a permanent fixture.

He put his palms to his face, leaned back and let the hands slide backward through his hair, accidentally knocking the sunglasses off. “I guess we’ll just have no say from here on out.”

“We will eventually be able to give direction,” I told him, not really knowing if that was the truth. 

 “You might be able to do that,” he said., “But I’ll be the first to be left behind. Why can’t we do things the way we used to? Let’s build something up.”

“I can’t. I’ve fucked that all up. You know I fucked that up.”

“You didnt fuck anything up. I don’t get how you think anything was permanent. We never even left the ground.”

“The momentum is gone. The idea is gone — I let it die.”

“And you have no more ideas?”

“Why would I when this idea is so good?”

“Because you no longer get to choose.”

“Most times when I choose, we fist fight,” I said, trying to be wounded. I was simply afraid. Not ready to step into myself and take accountability. It was easier to become employed by an idea than to learn how to lead once again. “I got you.”

“I’m not even a part of it.”

“You will be, I promise.”

As I become a spicy offspring of the character I once was, the reminisced missteps seem to lean toward happier memories when I was making accurate measurements. Of course, those memories are easier to understand and swallow, knowing that the present is all I can really handle anymore. Evasive as it is.

We pull up to the campsite and I realize how wrong I was for convincing my best friend to do these things. Each of us is in the same position, except he is full of acceptance and I am the one writhing in resentment. I’ve got to get us out of this.

Other campers are celebrating around the fire, playing cornhole, imbibing, barbecuing. It takes me to the plateau’s lone house. The cows. Every out-of-view inhabitant on the verge of this peak.

I wonder: what rides your minds up here?

WITH NOBODY SEEING

“If I was dead, I would hope nobody would see!”

“Whaddyu mean?”

“I wouldn’t want them to have to see!” the girl whirled around. “Dying makes people sad!”

He thought about that for a minute, holding a small tree branch out of her way as she took the lead. They tested the malleability of teenage birch trees. Burnt leaves hang rigid, shimmering as a reflex to their tugging. 

It’s dry, it’s crisp. It’s intentionally falling apart. She pokes a dead critter with a stick and raises her eyebrows at him.

“Ew,” he said. His contemplation bloomed: “Actually: I think I would want them to see – Well, maybe not. I would want them to come see me. After I was dead. When I was dying, though — I don’t think I’d want them to see that…” He points at the still fur. “We didn’t have to see that. That’s probably why you’re being gross – poking him with a stick.”

“He doesn’t care! How do you know he didn’t die earlier just to be dead here while we were walking by?” She commits to a seriousness, waving the stick from the critter toward the sky then back to the ground where she makes a circle around it. “He gets to stay home from school, for good.

The girl was pushed by silence. “I think I change my mind: I would only want people to see me if I was dead—”

“—If you were dying”

“Right! If I was dying – I would oooonly want people to see it if they were okay with it, like ME!” Satisfied, she laid her stick down gently by the critter. A memorial. The boy found a stone to rest his legs considering the facts before him. He draws his fist up underneath his chin with the thumb untucked.

“What about if somebody saw you dying?” he begins, slightly bravado. “—and it makes them feel really, really bad. But they actually can stop you from dying, so they have to come and see you while you’re still alive but about to die – but they don’t like it the whole time, even though they want to save you.”

“I insist on being by myself if I was going to have to die.” This was honest-to-God. 

“You don’t know when you have to die! It’s completely up to the last second — some genius doctor could bring you back to life. Or they’d have your favorite food. It’d smell so good that just the thought of not having your favorite food again would bring you back to life!” He realized all of these things as each word came out. 

“That’s ridiculous!” she replied. The boy noticed a wavering as she continued, “a smell is not going to bring me back to life if I am dying, D-Y-I-N-G. I would be too busy crossing over to the great blue sky to care about food. I’d be getting cheeseburgers with angels. I could have any type of food I want. With ANGELS.” 

The boy rolled his eyes and stood up. He cannot combat the supremacy of Cheeseburgers with Angels. Why would he? Way more impressive than normal, on-Earth, human-kid food. He likes steak. And Doritos, all types. She got in his head with that one.

Sunlight reaches a sacred position, overlooking the children as they reach their destination. Moments away from the clearing, the two stop and look out over the tree farm. Row after row of the trees folks chop and cherish for Christmas. They gaze out over the yellow orange and yellow greens before them, sneakers out of view beneath the frontline of tall grass. They don’t dare step one inch into that clearing. The tree farmer is known to shoot all trespassers dead, especially the little ones. 

A safe distance from that forbidden pass, a huge, old tree is marked by a set of planks nailed into its trunk. Neither the boy or the girl have any idea who built this treefort, but they are grateful. 

“Let’s vow to protect this fort with our lives. And welcome all wayward kids like us in need of higher places to hang out!”

The boy remembers that and asks, “Do you think we could fight off the Old Tree Farmer if he knew about this over here?”

“He wouldn’t shoot a girl.”

“He shoots all kids!”

“I haven’t seen it happen once, and I’m always here.”

“That’s cuz it’s just you and me that come here, and we run a tight ship.”

“I come here other times, too.”

“No you don’t. When?”

“Doesn’t matter. At night. And other times when you can’t come play.”

“You come outside at night??” The boy is reeling, as his bedtime is at 8 PM. He’s also afraid of the dark and coyotes. Plus, she does not go out at night… Nobody could argue so good if they were always going in the woods at night. 

“That’s a sure way to end up dying with nobody seeing.” he says, thinking I gotcha!

“And I wouldn’t make anybody sad!” she says, smiling. Dark, but simpatico. “You get so riled up.” They climbed the Planky Trunk and shimmied around the second “floor.” One impressive bough extended past the threshold of the forest line, into the Tree Farmer’s territory. The children believed this was No Man’s Land, and dangled their legs freely among an element of imminent danger.

“You just think about such weird stuff,” he said.

“It’s not weird at all” she was peeling the bark off of the bough next to her. “Does it scare you?”

“I guess not,” the boy was surprised that he agreed with these words. “I just don’t really know anybody that’s died…” The boy laughed.

“What’s funny?”

“I thought about asking a dead person what they thought about it and he didn’t have much to say,” the boy whispered, suppressing more laughter.

“See?” the girl grinning. “You’re a loony freak too. But that’s kind of what I’m saying. You just are dead at some point, and everybody’s dead at some point. Maybe the best way to be dead is to help people be funny about it. Or like — get them to remember everything besides that you died. Like doing them a service! Garbage man!”

“God! You take it so far – everytime!”

OBVIOUSLY

My drug addiction counselor, Counselor 6014, in Rehab pointed to the sun and said: “If that’s not God, then what is it?”

I said, “I guess I am open to the point you’re making.”

He said, “No, seriously. How can that be so perfect?”

I said, “Obviously, it is fortunate that it’s right there. Otherwise, we wouldn’t be right here.”

He said, “Yes it is. How amazing.”

———

Later on, in Rehab — I saw an Eagle. Where I’m from, there aren’t really eagles. There are perhaps no eagles. Much later in the future, I would see an eagle in the zoo where I live. I would see two eagles at the same time, actually. Not one of those creatures took any sort of flight.

So: I’m on my third cup of coffee no later than 7 AM, looking up at the vast wingspan at work thinking to myself: OK. That is obviously pretty Godly. 

Sitting in the circle with a bunch of fellow degenerates from the Great North, I share the fantastic news: I had seen an Eagle. 

“There are tons of eagles here, man.”

“You’re fuckin’ high.”

“We still shoot ‘em here.”

———

Counselor 6014 handed me a packet of long-form questions. They were to guide my reflection on the thinking that got me here. It is beautiful here — and quiet. They left us our phones since the Pandemic —well I’m not sure what it had to do with anything. But I’d still receive calls from my pals. They were obviously lit; wanted me to know they were holding it down and they missed me. And they had my chain from one night. 

I tried to find the questions verbatim, but the drawer I left them in some years ago stuck. I’m not 100% sure they’re even in there, so: fuck it. 

They went along these lines:

Write some thoughts about your average day in the industry.

When did you start to use chemicals? Why do you think you started?

If you had to add it up, how much do you think you spent on chemicals per day? How many days a week would you average spending using that amount? Now, total that amount to figure out how much you’d spend in a year?

Describe what brings you here.

——— 

A myriad of ballads written in my characteristic prose. Tried to tell them by hand, but I couldn’t pinch the font size well enough. I switched to a word processor to better fill my sails.

Counselor 6014 met with me days later. Long enough for me to be annoyed, imagining which part he would comment on. Grade me! Instead, Counselor 6014 asked me if I’d heard of the band, Switchfoot, and played a song. It wasn’t the good one.

“It’s good, I like this.” I would resume rigorous honesty tomorrow.

“These guys are also on a cleaner path,” said Counselor 6014. “Rockstars with God in the message.”

“They’re Christian Rock — that’s right.”

“They are. Do you have any experience with Christianity?”

“No. I was raised agnostic, fortunately.” A practiced reflection pause. “We went to church when people were married or dead.” 

Counselor 6014 kept his corners neutral & I had a memory.

“Actually… I went to one of those Wal-Mart style churches. The ones that are obviously not about religion. I was young, but not so young that I didn’t realize the peculiarity. 

“I had begun playing guitar, and this kid, Miles, was an amazing musician in our class. The best guitar player, and could sing as well. He invited me to a show. 

“The show was at the Church?” 6014 clarified.

Yes. But that’s not how the information was handed to me,” I relive it any time I’ve told it. I haven’t played this number in a while: “I obviously thought it was a show. I wouldn’t go into that place otherwise, it’s like they build tanks — we were all agitated by that place.”

“Who was?” asked Counselor 6014.

“Me!” I had the old inertia back reliving this one, “That’s not a legitimate why to practice faith. Why would it be so massive? Why is the parking lot enough for a football game. That’s so crazy to me. Still!”

“Perhaps the point is to draw in a younger audience. Shouldn’t they try to share their faith with others?” 

“Share, sure. But force? Manifest Destiny our neighborhood?” I wonder if he knows I’ve built this position on hearsay via well-spoken, well-opinioned pals that do cocaine with me. It will take me further years to realize I’ve manifest destiny’d every neighborhood I’ve entered. 

“If you’re open to their format, it must be a wonderful resource for music, and dancing, and community. Lou, you are literally within the walls of a multi-million, maybe -billion facility, depending on how you look at it. If you find a God here, you’ll be finding it identically to the way the Tank Factory Folks.”

6014 takes a breath to register my response. I fix my alert face back to indifferent. He says, “Not everyone has to be on their knees to get their faith either.”

I clear my throat a little and reposition. “That’s fair. I’m not saying I’m special or better.” I thought and said, “ —or Godless.”

“So where do you stand on God as you define it?”

“I was given the advice to not worry about it coming here.” That was true. I was told to ignore it actually. 

“Probably good advice.” Counselor 6014 adjusted to the datapad. “You sent me quite a bit of material.

This was the part I was here for. Fuck that old story, these are my real ones. 

I was remembering some of what I wrote. There was enough pause for me to remember my chemical expenses.

“21K for one year was insane — I don’t think I embellished anything either!” ‘

“You say obviously too much.”

“What?”

“Yeah, you say obviously all the time — look at all these,” Counselor tipped over his pad to flip the image. There were bright red markings near every instance of obviously. A lot of bright red.

“I guess I was writing stream of conscious. Probably should’ve went through and edited — I just kinda like to go with it.” I was not being rigorously honest today. That lie won’t count against me. Since I was on the computer, I had all the power to wrote the thing over and over again. Didn’t seem to mess with the flow of things. Obviously. Why does it even matter? What a weird take-away.

“How do you think everything that goes on with you is obvious?” Counselor bringing back to now. 

“I don’t.”

“But, then, it’s not obvious,” he cross examined. “You ought to try to correct that.”

“It’s a turn of phrase, or like, uh, or like, or a stutter… who cares?”

“It’s similar to that: Who cares?” Counselor is fixated, gently. “Obviously. Things that are obvious are just that. It’s more like Literally, I suppose. People say literally all the time. Usually they use it more in the paradox that it’s not literally happening.”

What are we doing here?

I say, “Yeah. For sure. I just didn’t think about it. I write how I talk and that’s always been good.”

“Always?”

For fuck’s sake. “Yes always, but not in the ‘obviously’ or ‘literally way.’” Fuck this guy! 

“It’s a thing we can fall into. Speaking in assumptions, thinking that people are aware of your situation. You fancy yourself a writer and write how you speak. Has literally no one, ever, had a mark of criticism or rejected your work?”

“OK Counselor, Obvi —” I am flustered. “Not obviously. Of course, I haven’t pleased everyone with the work! But that was work! Did you not want to hear about my addictions that got me here?!

“You’ve steamrolled the real reasons you’re here with ‘obviously.’ What you’re hopefully going to learn in recovery is everything you believe to be so obvious.” 

———

I let some silence occur. I’m less shameful than I am let down by the complete absence of the audience I had promised myself. Promised without any foundational evidence. I am the problem. I figured I would also be the Great Performer on stage, twirling a multidimensional act immersed in every medium. Being diagnosed on all sides, rocketing growth is judged until judgment is exchanged for cheer. I was obviously mistaken!

———

“Everything that you’ve given here, I haven’t read all of.” Counselor 6014 resumes us.
“Gotcha.”

“But I do believe this has helped you to reflect and consider what you’ve been through, and what you can look forward to the further you work on yourself. This is one of many beginnings we’ll have together.

“Is there anything else you’d like to talk about before we end our day?”

“Don’t you wanna know what happened at the Church?” I hate not finishing my stories.
Counselor 6014 nodded, returning his attention to me — like he does all day with all kinds of addicts.

“Miles’ Mom lets us out the car, and we enter the massive space with all the pews—”

“—The sanctuary,” Counselor 6014, endless with patience.

“Right, but it’s massive. We find seats and Miles leans over saying, ‘They’re going to talk for a bit, then the music starts. It’s gonna be awesome, you’ll love it.’ 

“The sermon was like a real sermon. To a kid, that is much longer, I know. But imagine it was ten minutes after being told you’re going to a rock show. I read through the whole “Join Church Camp“ pamphlet thing they handed us at the door.”

Counselor’s jacket was on. I was still seated, feeling my face get warm. 

“Alright, sorry. The point is, when the band finally got on, they played one song for like,

twenty minutes. All it was, was a hook. They had the words projected on all the screens hanging down off the walls. Everybody just sang over and over the same shit. Brainwishywashy!

“Honestly, 6014, it coulda been thirty minutes — I don’t know cause I walked out of there. All the way out. Miles came out after me apologizing profusely, saying ‘Dude, what’s wrong? I’m sorry, it’s done man we can just hang out now!’

“We waited in this bright food court-y area for Miles’ Mom. She was taking forever. And all these teenagers were coming over to me and introducing themselves. I find that so fuckin weird to this day. But I realize, they were recruiters for this goofy Christian Church Camp like in my pamphlet and gave—”

“—and they gave you free snack bar vouchers and friendship bracelets?” Counselor was ready to call it. 

“Yeah dude! They did! ”Then  I felt clever, “Like that is obviously not appropriate!?”

“Obvious only to you. Then and now. You weren’t alone — and you also didn’t mention asking these things to end. You’d be best to blame yourself for not sticking to your initial unsettled reaction.” Counsellor 6014 was blank, almost reciting. “You were not obvious. Sounds like you enjoyed the submersion for the sake of retelling this story”

What?!” 

———

That we were now walking down the hallway was a surprise to me; who was reeling through the memory trying to recall a moment I could refer to to back myself up. But the time had passed. Unless:

“Well, wait a second,” I sparked. “The band playing the same thing for five hours in a row is obviously bullshit right?”

“Yes. That is bad Christian Rock.”

“Alright. Thanks.”

“Some things are allowed to be subjective.”

We had a few moments left of shared hallway before we’d part.

“Do you guys always see eagles all the time up here?”

“Yes. I think most of them live up here where it’s safe.”

“I saw one this morning and thought it might be a blatant God shot for me, but the boys said no.”

“Do you see eagles all the time?”

“No! Never.”

“That’s obviously God.”