Saturday, September 27, 2014
Friday, August 30, 2013
The propagation of fear - What love can do
It was Sunday
August 25th 2013 and Arlene and I were driving back on
Route 52 coming from St. Stephen , SC. We had just come from the canal on the Santee
river which empties into lake
Moultrie . It’s one of our favorite walks although you
have to be careful the dogs don’t go in the water without supervision…there’s
many an alligator just waiting for a snarky border Collie and Wily Lab to just
come passing by to make them brunch.
I was in a conversation with Arlene about New
Mexico and whether her Aunt and Uncle’s stores they
have there were doing well. I was
passing a large pickup truck, correctly I might add which was going a bit
slower than my pace. The speed limit on
52 in that rural part of Berkeley
county is 60mph…but everyone does an average of 70+. I must have been doing about 70 passing the
truck very slowly. Upcoming from the
rear was a person in a white car taling me.
You know the type…no matter how fast you go they are easily going to
outdo you by 10mph minimum. Sometimes I
will marvel at people sitting in a stiff position with a sort of a disconnected
stare on their faces as they race past me at what appears to me crazy
speeds. I should talk…I used to be one
of them.
Apparently I was not passing the truck fast enough for
the person in the white car so I sped up to pass the truck. I learned (mostly from riding with my friend
T.M. on motorcycles to just let people by.
He would always let cars by no matter what if they got too
close. Thereby letting go of pride and the need to be "right"). It’s a great practice on a
motorcycle and a great spiritual principle no matter what you drive….just let go. So I sped up quite a bit and finally passed
the truck, in making that pass I got up to appr. 80mph.
Now this is where it gets interesting. Usually the person races past you in the left
lane and life is back to normal. But
sometimes you get someone that feels it is your responsibility to make their
world go the way they want and think they need it to go. So he does it…he slows down to confront
me. My window is open…it was a picture
perfect day and one of those rare days the temperature was cool enough to keep
the windows down in my wifes 2003 Rav 4.
The interaction went something like this:
“Hey motherfucker, don’t you know what the fucking left lane
is for?! It’s for passing motherfucker!” I retort:
“Yup, did you see the giant piece of metal right behind me I PASSED,
they call that a TRUCK!”
This is when he got really irate, it was as if I switched
some “My dad made me feel like a fool and not good enough and
what you just said is the exact way he did it" look. He flipped out:
“Fuck you!
I’ll kick your ass!”
In which I
retorded: "We’re done!”
And I turned and faced forward realizing to
fuel this was not going to be a good thing.
He started yelling again in a car moving at 75 MPH right next to me. Why the hell was he so damn angry? WTF? I'm glad I don't feel that way much anymore.
…I
glanced over and he reached down and pulled out a handgun and pointed it at my
head...
I swerved intuitively (A huge
thanks goes out to Steven Jucks here. My
father in law who being a retired Police officer taught me that when your car swerves
like that out of control always steer INTO the slide and not away from it. I am not sure why but I remembered it
flawlessly. I hit the brakes as a second
thought and he passed on. But that was
when I made the instantaneous decision to go after him. It was not debated…I just knew it was the
right thing to do.
Arlene being terrified was screaming “Stay away from
him! Don’t get close!” I said to her…”This is just the right thing!”
And off I went, at first to just get his license plate but
then turning into much more of an insight for me. We were doing speeds of up to and over 100 mph, much
of the time in 25mph zones. I don’t know
Goose Creek at all, we were driving
at breakneck speeds through ;little neighborhoods with people out mowing lawns
and kids playing. By this time I was on
the phone with 911 calling in every street we passed while he drove up on those
same lawns people were mowing. I had
gotten his license plate but the 911 operator wanted me to keep going and let
me know the major part of the Goose Creek
police dept was converging on the area trying to block him off. But at one point I glanced up and saw the 25mph
sign and looked down at my speedometer.
I was doing 107mph…whoa. I said
it to her: “He’s doing almost 110mph in
a 25mph zone!” She said slow DOWN
sir! I did and eventually lost him, only
guessing as to where he went at the end of that road and the next.
From there much happened and is still happening. But the takeway for me is huge. Here is a man who was engaging in fear (He had
a gun ready to grab in the seat next to him).
He pointed it at me to scare me.
And I was the one chasing HIM!?
Reap and sew
Judged, be judged
Measure it shall be measured unto you
Reap sparingly, sew sparingly
Reap abundantly. Sew abundantly
Living by sword, dying by sword
Speck in eye, log in eye
These teachings all came to mind plus many others afterwards.
I went home after the “ordeal” and took a nap. Yup, I realized that every second after the
reaction to swerve I felt no fear whatsoever.
I was calm (I want to see if I can obtain the 911 call but just found out I would need a subpoena) and he was contrastingly
crazy in his actions and words. In the
world, you would have thought the one with the gun would have been the “powerful”
one. But here I was chasing him in my
small Rav 4 on many deserted roads where he “could” have stopped and shot me or
even scared me away. But he ran…and oh
did he run. He lived in fear and his
plan reaped what he lived in. Karma
means “action,” you play in shit…you
smell and look like shit. You become
shit. I became more that just the man who was in the now or the guy whose mind wandered. I was the observer watching it all occur. This was huge for me, I saw the 3rd person we only become aware of in crisis situations and usually we are so traumatized we are not aware of that entity.
I am not saying this to toot my horn, for in fact I feel it is within all of us to find out with proof there is NOTHING to truly fear. Yes we experience fear, but that is always a concept of future...but we do not HAVE to experience fear at all. Since the truth is, there really is nothing to be afraid of "out there."
Arlene’s words before I took a nap were…”You’re going to
take a nap. He probably won’t sleep for a
month.”
And I slept like a baby.
I actually forgot the incident until the sherrif called me 2 days
later. Wow, what Love can do.
Thursday, May 16, 2013
I am Overcome
Holy Water in my Lungs.
Here we are only a couple of weeks past my Mom dying. Arlene just called me 5 minutes ago to tell me that my brother in Law Albert just died today.
I am overcome...
Everyone up there is in shock.
I realize how useless it is. If we are not in the now, we are not. I feel a strange anxiety, like a pins and needles in my upper torso.
I know what to say, I know what to do. I can't convey it, since you cannot speak through insanity.
It's useless.
Temporary, fleeting, yet eternal. Endings, always endings and beginnings and endings. Start and never finish.
What am I saying?
THIS, is the first 20 minutes. A snapshot of the insanity of grief. The ego speaking it's lies and my knowing speaking my truth. I am in what "shock" would be for me.
Albert and I sort of grew up together...he was with my sister since 16 years old and he was like an older brother. I know on a deep level why and how this occurred. I know why this happened.
A battle between philosophies. Then will come my decision. My decision to be happy. But today is just a little more "so what" than yesterday...an hour ago...five minutes ago.
I am overcome....
There is absolutely nothing for me to do. I can only deny the lie. The stories that the ego tells me are just plain stupid at this point. I am seeing this differently. The hardest part is thinking about what someone else (My sister) is experiencing. The loss, the horror, the emptiness...without knowing anything that I do.
I feel sadness for that.
But I always go back to my great beloved...My God. I can feel a gentle stroke on my forehead. It would be far too much, far too much without Him. It also would make no sense. Everything is going to be okay.
Funny. I just thought of him Yesterday. For that, I am overcome.
Here we are only a couple of weeks past my Mom dying. Arlene just called me 5 minutes ago to tell me that my brother in Law Albert just died today.
I am overcome...
Everyone up there is in shock.
I realize how useless it is. If we are not in the now, we are not. I feel a strange anxiety, like a pins and needles in my upper torso.
I know what to say, I know what to do. I can't convey it, since you cannot speak through insanity.
It's useless.
Temporary, fleeting, yet eternal. Endings, always endings and beginnings and endings. Start and never finish.
What am I saying?
THIS, is the first 20 minutes. A snapshot of the insanity of grief. The ego speaking it's lies and my knowing speaking my truth. I am in what "shock" would be for me.
Albert and I sort of grew up together...he was with my sister since 16 years old and he was like an older brother. I know on a deep level why and how this occurred. I know why this happened.
A battle between philosophies. Then will come my decision. My decision to be happy. But today is just a little more "so what" than yesterday...an hour ago...five minutes ago.
I am overcome....
There is absolutely nothing for me to do. I can only deny the lie. The stories that the ego tells me are just plain stupid at this point. I am seeing this differently. The hardest part is thinking about what someone else (My sister) is experiencing. The loss, the horror, the emptiness...without knowing anything that I do.
I feel sadness for that.
But I always go back to my great beloved...My God. I can feel a gentle stroke on my forehead. It would be far too much, far too much without Him. It also would make no sense. Everything is going to be okay.
Funny. I just thought of him Yesterday. For that, I am overcome.
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
I am prepared
I have always somehow been “prepared.” I don’t know how to explain that really, I
just know I have.
I was 24 years old and I had this new girlfriend. Her name was Nina and at the time I thought
she was the most beautiful girl on the planet, she was my Phoebe Cates look alike
and I was going to take her out that night.
I stopped at home (My parent’s house) first and while
walking in I was told to sit down. My
Mom had a cold look on her face like I had seen before. Like something so overwhelming had happened
to her that it was impossible to convey.
She began to convey to me how my Brother Scott had just shot himself and
died. This look on her face (and my Dad)
was telling and something I would become more familiar with as I would see it
not only on their faces for the rest of their lives but on many of my
clients. This look, this calibratory
collection of signals has come to mean: “I am in crisis and am in the process
of shoving everything into my unconscious mind right now” signal. Only to have it rise up throughout your life
to deal with it later.
That night was strange for me and I cannot help but feel
that even though I cried and acted quite crazy I was holding off the real pain (or
the thoughts that create it) for a time I could deal with it. My Sister in Law
was drugged to the hilt to desensitize her from the pain, for me it was completely
surreal and would remain that way for many years. Even though I didn’t “know” he was going to
die that night, it is interesting to note I was the only one to contact him
before hand, I made my peace with him, I had time to ponder him not being here,
I had tied up any loose ends I could without even being aware of it…and this is
a pattern that would hold true from there on.
When my Father died, when Arlene’s Grandfather died, When my Aunt died, when
my pets died it was like I knew. I would
take strange and unexpected trips to see them before hand. I find Arlene and I saying, “It’s amazing we
went on that unplanned visit” or “Something was telling me this was going to
happen.” I was always ready even if not in form.
So it is no surprise then that yesterday April 23rd 2013 I had
clear thoughts of my Mom and brother and my niece. They pop up once in a blue moon in my mind,
but seriously, I am mostly in the now and this is a quite rare occurrence.
I found out my Mom passed away last night.
I remember the last conversation I had with her. She said to call a little more. I was thinking what it would be like if she
passed and I had not called. It was like
I was covering bases…working it all out before it happened. I took an “unplanned” trip to NJ in late
January (after not going home for Christmas) to see her specifically, I felt
strongly I need to do that. That trip
was momentous even though at first I whined about going at all. I made my peace with her on some level I
cannot quite explain. I said to Arlene
after the visit: “I really feel good about this, I’m ready now.” I was referring to the conclusion of some
story that we both shared. Some drama a
person has with another that can play out for lifetimes. Mine was complete with her somehow…
Besides for the weather (Are the clouds going to leave this
year?) I feel good today. Of course the
ego is trying to have its say in all this.
Last night I remember thinking to one of its ridiculous diatribes: “I am
going to feel wonderful in a month, 6 months and a year from now. This will pass, so why not feel wonderful
right now?” It was almost as if I was
supposed to be devastated about all of it and found myself about to play the
role. I counsel my clients in all this…here I was walking the walk now.
In the book: The Denial of Death” by Ernest Becker he
attributes all Psychosomatic illness to our denial of death. Jesus would agree
stating” Die not Son of God in which the dark dance of death delights you, die
not…” The Buddhists spend a LOT of time on the concept of death and dying.
There is something to this.
They are pointing something out. Death is something we try to avoid our whole
lives. But in form it seems that it is
inevitable so the key is to die before you die.
To realize you are not that which seems to die through that knowledge…to
REALLY KNOW it.
I feel I’m on the right path with this. My life has been surrounded by death (I was
fortunate to have older parents and be the youngest of 6). I used to think that was a curse, I realize
the blessing it is now. How it is
playing a significant role in helping me to deal with this crazy concept of
death here and now. Not wait until the “great
cold surrounds my bones.” –Shakespeare’s Prospero
I realize this post is a bit scattered. I have much along these lines to convey but
these are my initial thoughts:
We do not die
There is no opposite to life
To believe it somehow means the God of life has an opposite
and can end
This is not possible
Yet somehow it seems we end
So it must be that what we “see” is not necessarily life
It is something to pass itself off as life that seemingly can
end
Thereby making the creator “wrong.”
I will not fold.
I will not budge.
I will not give a single inch on this matter.
It is a lie.
“The only correct use of denial is denial of the ego…” –
ACIM
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
I wake up to the sound of music...
Below are some quotes about my feelings on music. I have come to realize very powerfully recently that I have always been and will always be a musician. I have shed so much within the last 10 years...but music I just cannot shake. When I went to research the connection I found these. Some funny and some deadly serious...enjoy. - Keith Sudano
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“Without music, life would be a mistake.” - Friedrich Nietzsche
“If I were not a physicist, I would probably be a musician. I often think in music. I live my daydreams in music. I see my life in terms of music.”― Albert Einstein
“If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD WAS MUSIC” ― Kurt Vonnegut
“Music expresses that which cannot be put into words and that which cannot remain silent”
― Victor Hugo
“Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination
and life to everything.” ― Plato.
“Music is to the soul what words are to the mind.” ― Modest Mouse
“The only truth is music.” ― Jack Kerouac
“Music is ... A higher revelation than all Wisdom & Philosophy” ― Ludwig van Beethoven
“If music be the food of
love, play on, Give me excess of it; that surfeiting, The appetite may sicken,
and so die.” ― William Shakespeare, Twelfth Night
“And those who were seen
dancing were thought to be insane by those who could not hear the music.”― Friedrich Nietzsche
“Music was my refuge. I
could crawl into the space between the notes and curl my back to loneliness.”― Maya Angelou
“After silence, that which
comes nearest to expressing the inexpressible is music.” ― Aldous Huxley, Music
At Night: And Other Essays
“Life is for the living.
Death is for the dead.
Let life be like music.
And death a note unsaid.”
― Langston Hughes, The Collected Poems
“And I thought about how
many people have loved those songs. And how many people got through a lot of
bad times because of those songs. And how many people enjoyed good times with
those songs. And how much those songs really mean. I think it would be great to
have written one of those songs. I bet if I wrote one of them, I would be very
proud. I hope the people who wrote those songs are happy. I hope they feel it's
enough. I really do because they've made me happy. And I'm only one person.”
― Stephen Chbosky, The Perks of Being a
Wallflower
“Some people have lives;
some people have music.” ― John Green, Will Grayson
“The only escape from the
miseries of life are music and cats...”― Albert Schweitzer
To stop the flow of music
would be like the stopping of time itself, incredible and inconceivable.” ―
Aaron Copland
“Music . . . can name the unnamable
and communicate the unknowable.” ― Leonard Bernstein
“A man should hear a little
music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in
order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which
God has implanted in the human soul.” ― Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
“Because when he
sings...even the birds stop to listen.” ― Suzanne Collins, The Hunger Games
“A painter paints pictures
on canvas. But musicians paint their pictures on silence.” ― Leopold Stokowski
“Who hears music, feels his
solitude peopled at once.” ― Robert Browning
“I just can't listen to any
more Wagner, you know...I'm starting to get the urge to conquer Poland .”― Woody Allen
“Ah, music," he said,
wiping his eyes. "A magic beyond all we do here!” ― J.K. Rowling, Harry
Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
“I don't stand for black
man's side, I don't stand for white man's side, I stand for God's side.” ― Bob
Marley
“Music touches us
emotionally, where words alone can't.” ―
Johnny Depp
“I Wanna Hold Your Hand.’
First single. Fucking brilliant. Perhaps the most fucking brilliant song ever
written. Because they nailed it. That’s what everyone wants. Not 24-7 hot wet
sex. Not a marriage that lasts a hundred years. Not a Porsche or a blow job or
a million-dollar crib. No. They wanna hold your hand. They have a feeling that
they can’t hide.” ― Rachel Cohn, Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist
“Music is the universal
language of mankind.” ― Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
“For those of you in the
cheap seats I'd like ya to clap your hands to this one; the rest of you can
just rattle your jewelry!” ― John Lennon
“When you make music or
write or create, it's really your job to have mind-blowing, irresponsible,
condomless sex with whatever idea it is you're writing about at the time. ” ― Lady Gaga
“If being an egomaniac means
I believe in what I do and in my art or music, then in that respect you can
call me that... I believe in what I do, and I'll say it.” ― John Lennon
“I've always thought people
would find a lot more pleasure in their routines if they burst into song at
significant moments.” ― John Barrowman
“A quiet secluded life in
the country, with the possibility of being useful to people to whom it is easy
to do good, and who are not accustomed to have it done to them; then work which
one hopes may be of some use; then rest, nature, books, music, love for one's
neighbor — such is my idea of happiness.”
― Leo Tolstoy
“Have you ever heard
somebody sing some lyrics that you've never sung before, and you realize you've
never sung the right words in that song? You hear them and all of a sudden you
say to yourself, 'Life in the Fast Lane?' That's what they're saying right there?
You think, 'why have I been singing 'wipe in the vaseline?' how many people
have heard me sing 'wipe in the vaseline?' I am an idiot.” ― Ellen DeGeneres
“Music is the great uniter.
An incredible force. Something that people who differ on everything and
anything else can have in common.” ― Sarah Dessen, Just Listen
“Where words fail, music
speaks.” ― Hans Christian Andersen
“So don't you worry your
pretty little mind because people throw rocks at things that shine. “ ― Taylor
Swift
“Music is the wine that
fills the cup of silence.” ― Robert Fripp
“I love the relationship
that anyone has with music ... because there's something in us that is beyond
the reach of words, something that eludes and defies our best attempts to spit
it out. ... It's the best part of us probably ...” ― Nick Hornby
“There ain't no devil, only
God when he's drunk.” ― Tom Waits
“The music is not in the
notes,but in the silence between.” ― Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
“Beethoven tells you what
it's like to be Beethoven and Mozart tells you what it's like to be human. Bach
tells you what it's like to be the universe.” ― Douglas Adams
“Music is an agreeable
harmony for the honor of God and the permissible delights of the soul.”
― Johann Sebastian Bach
“Music acts like a magic
key, to which the most tightly closed heart opens.” ― Maria von Trapp
“Music is the language of
the spirit. It opens the secret of life bringing peace, abolishing strife.”
― Kahlil Gibran
“You have to, take a deep
breath. and allow the music to flow through you. Revel in it, allow yourself to
awe. When you play allow the music to break your heart with its beauty.” ― Kelly White
“Music is everybody's
business. It's only the publishers who think people own it” ― John Lennon
“Men profess to be lovers of
music, but for the most part they give no evidence in their opinions and lives
that they have heard it.” ― Henry David
Thoreau
“If you cannot teach me to
fly, teach me to sing.” ― J.M. Barrie,
Peter Pan
“If it weren't for music, I
would think that love is mortal.” ― Mark
Helprin, A Soldier of the Great War
“Music is an outburst of the
soul.” ― Frederick Delius
“My heart, which is so full
to overflowing, has often been solaced and refreshed by music when sick and
weary.” ― Martin Luther
“Music is crucial. Beyond no
way can I overstress this fact. Let's say you're southbound on the interstate,
cruising alone in the middle lane, listening to AM radio. Up alongside comes a
tractor trailer of logs or concrete pipe, a tie-down strap breaks, and the load
dumps on top of your little sheetmetal ride. Crushed under a world of concrete,
you're sandwiched like so much meat salad between layers of steel and glass. In
that last, fast flutter of your eyelids, you looking down that long tunnel
toward the bright God Light and your dead grandma walking up to hug you--do you
want to be hearing another radio commercial for a mega, clearance, closeout,
blow-out liquidation car-stereo sale?” ― Chuck Palahniuk, Rant
“Joy, sorrow, tears,
lamentation, laughter -- to all these music gives voice, but in such a way that
we are transported from the world of unrest to a world of peace, and see
reality in a new way, as if we were sitting by a mountain lake and
contemplating hills and woods and clouds in the tranquil and fathomless water.”― Albert Schweitzer
“I never liked jazz music
because jazz music doesn't resolve. But I was outside the Bagdad Theater in Portland one night when I saw a man playing the saxophone. I
stood there for fifteen minutes, and he never opened his eyes.
After that I liked jazz music.
Sometimes you have to watch
somebody love something before you can love it yourself. It is as if they are
showing you the way.
I used to not like God
because God didn't resolve. But that was before any of this happened.”
― Donald Miller, Blue Like Jazz: Nonreligious
Thoughts on Christian Spirituality
“We are the music-makers,
And we are the dreamers of
dreams,
Wandering by lone
sea-breakers,
And sitting by desolate
streams.
World-losers and
world-forsakers,
Upon whom the pale moon
gleams;
Yet we are the movers and
shakers,
Of the world forever, it seems.”
― Arthur O'Shaughnessy, Poems of Arthur
O'Shaughnessy
“I wake up to the sound of
music, Mother Mary comes to me
Speaking words of wisdom, let it be”― Paul
McCartney
Yet when that dance becomes destructive, it does not mean that I am guilty, that I have corrupted my being. For the outer universe may dance to my music, but my inner being dances only to my Father's music, and He only sings of innocence. - Jesus/ACIM
Monday, February 4, 2013
Stop listening to others
As many of you know, I have always been a creator of
music. I have within me a profound
desire to create a symphony every so often so intense that I have recently come
to realize it will never just go away or vanish. I have tried to squelch it in the past. So many hurtful memories were associated with
it and wrapped around it that I just couldn’t look at it; I would not allow
myself to hear it.
I take you back about 3 to 4 years ago. I had little desire to play music. I remembered the wonderful days long ago when
I would adore it but to think about it a few years ago sent waves of pain
through me. It was one of my largest
lessons in this world. To deal with the
regret and sorrow those memory traces held for me was my #1 Forgiveness subject
for 10 years. But some strange thing happened back 3 years ago. I started building a “music room” in my
house. The guitars made sense…I like guitars. The drums made sense since I was a drummer
for years when I was younger. The keyboard
made sense because I played some keyboards on the songs I made with the band
and you can use it as a Midi sampler. Now…the Bass was a little strange. It is an instrument I have had very little
contact with and resonance with. Within
the band I was the singer/ songwriter and composer. I acted like a conductor at every stage. Pre production was my middle name and there
is a video I just placed on youtube from back in 1999 where my role is
obvious. As well as videotaping the
practice session, I was guiding the music within the song…”my” song that they
were playing. I was videotaping for an Australian TV station that wanted to do
a feature on us and I thought maybe we could film and they would edit it and
piece some things worthwhile together. But
why buy the damn Bass?
The next thing I bought was some rack gear. Compressors, delays, Exciters, Limiters, monitors
and Microphones. Not dynamic mics (the
kind you would use onstage) but Condensers (the kind you record with). I even bought
digital multitracks. Now THIS was all
completely strange. I knew how to use
very little of it. We always had a
professional sound engineer in a professional studio. But all that Gain staging, mixing, editing
and mastering were foreign to me in many ways, I wasn’t paying attention…or so
I thought. Why did I pick the equipment I picked? Why buy it if I didn’t know how to use it?
I thought maybe I was just trying to feel better about
myself, to recapture the past, or maybe even because I have been a compulsive
Aries at other times in my life. Buying
equipment because it had cool knobs and it softened the blow of a past that
still rang bitter in my heart. The music room (or “studio”) sat for a few years
silent. I spent very little time in
there and thought I should just sell everything off and make it a spare
guestroom. I remember walking past it
with a feeling of dread since I had invested so much in it and used it
practically nada. Something would not
allow me to get rid of ANYTHING. I tried to post much of it on Craigslist
about a year ago and the circus I had during that experience with illusive
buyers and no shows was too stupid to be discussed. It was obviously for a
reason.
Then about 6 months ago my mind started engaging in music
again. I had a feeling to go into
Digital Audio Workstations (All computer based recording). This particular idea made me feel
nauseous. I thought I hated technology
when it came to creating music. I was in
reality scared of it. A client of mine mentioned she used a particular program
to create a small piece for a show she had done. I thought “If she can do that, why can’t
I?” So I stared to study music creation
again. Today I am taking online classes
from the Berklee College of Music on full music studio production. And I am learning
a great many things…much of what only the people who visit my office would
understand. Yes I am learning technical mumbo jumbo, but mainly I am learning I
already know what to do.
I was reading a book about 2 weeks ago. It was speaking about “Near field
Monitors.” These are Monitors studios
use to listen to tracks they just recorded and are especially important during
mixdown where the type of speakers you use can determine a bad mix or a good
one. In this book the author, who was a
very accomplished sound engineer, spoke about how having Monitors with Bass
reflex ports was unacceptable to true music production. He had tons of facts and figures as to “why”
this was the case. It was like a
scientific dossier on why Carbs are no good for you with flow charts and
dynamic polar patterns all included. The
author pointed at the fact that so many professional studios had these
monitors. He was right, I remembered they did (or did they?)…at least I
remembered seeing them in the 6 studios we recorded in. I felt like I was
punched in the gut and I scrambled…I had bought monitors 3 years earlier that
did indeed have Bass reflex ports in them. I felt a sinking feeling…I was going
to have to rebuild this whole studio from the ground up. I started searching for monitors without
those ports…and they were EXPENSIVE (monitors are already pricey but these were
just stupid).
But something was speaking to me. I was going to pull the trigger on a new set
of speakers but I felt internally “wrong” about it. All these years of listening within has
taught me that is a sign you are about to do something not in accordance with
the will of the creator. So I
waited and I was still plagued by the
feeling of having insufficient equipment.
But I had this thought within my mind, it was small but relentless. I
KNEW this “voice.” I knew it had the
same feeling of truth in it as I can have about so many subjects. It was the Voice. I immediately went inward and asked “show me
what this is for.” I somehow knew what I
had was sufficient and right and that I was given all I needed. I was safe.
The next morning I was browsing the internet and came upon a
page (not by accident) that has PDF versions of books and there were two books
I had seen that stuck out. One was “How
to play piano,” and another was “Equipping the professional Home studio.” The piano book was great, It spoke to what I
needed without giving me volumes of notation lessons. The other book was a serious sign and I
scrolled through the pages. And YES of
course this happened…I found myself on the chapter called “The question of
Nearfield Monitors.” The author (another
non slouch with tons of credentials) explained the difference between monitors.
Here is the excerpt I stopped at:
“So, to bring this into recording studio
context, which should you choose? Should you choose a closed box loudspeaker
which will give you a more accurate sound quality and tell you what is on your
recording, or should you choose a bass reflex loudspeaker which in fact is
going to fatten the base content of your recording? This is one situation
where we have to go against the doctrine of nothing but the truth. If you
monitor on closed box loudspeakers, you are hearing
something that is different to what the
vast majority of customers who will buy your recording will hear. So you don’t really know what it’s going to
sound like on their systems. It will probably have too much bass because their speakers have more bass than yours. So for this reason it is usually advisable to choose bass reflex speakers as your studio monitors
so that you’re more in line with potential listeners to your music.”
Wow. So, here I found
two completely different views on the same subject (Shocker!). Two “experts” disagreeing once again…oh my
Lord how is this possible? :-) There it was,
the nonsense I had been doing all my life.
I had a pair of speakers that I bought for seemingly NO REASON and a
studio filled with equipment I bought in a state of ignorance and I didn’t
realize I was being guided? I went immediately
and started looking at the equipment I bought.
I wrote down model numbers and was already reading another
book on Home recording I was guided to. It was common for me to read about the
need for a piece of equipment and go in and find I already owned it. That happened so many times I started
assuming I had it hidden already. MUCH
of the time I was right. Whatever I did
buy I didn’t really need, so Amazon must have been frustrated from all the returns
from Charleston within a few
months. The equipment I already had was
well received with 5 stars on Amazon across the board. Wow, how did that happen? Where the Hell was I the whole time? Of
course it would be that way, of course.
I already had what I needed.
I had the voice within. It is the
same voice I amplify for my clients on a daily basis. For some reason to apply it to music was
illusive to me. It is the battle between
my egos need for “more” and never being good enough and Gods knowing I am fine
and perfect with what I am and what I have.
So in short I feel I’ve discovered the secret to living simply. It is
this:
Put your hands over your ears. Close your eyes. Now loudly say, “La la la la la. I’m not listening to you!”
Put your hands over your ears. Close your eyes. Now loudly say, “La la la la la. I’m not listening to you!”
I’m serious. Sort of.
The number one key to living simply is to simply listen to God and stop listening so intently to everyone else around you or that incessant voice within you that says you somehow need more.
The number one key to living simply is to simply listen to God and stop listening so intently to everyone else around you or that incessant voice within you that says you somehow need more.
Now 15 years later I am creating music again. I am actually
smiling when I am hearing it coming through the studio monitors (With Bass
reflex ports). I feel like a little kid
inside and saw myself jumping for joy the other day when I was playing drums on
a particular song and it sounded…well…”right.”
I am so in the now, so present during the making of music that I cannot
call it anything else but deeply spiritual for me.
By the way, I will be creating a CD of my new material over
the next coming months. It is high time. :-)
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