What
he remembered most about painting houses, as he did in his younger years, was
that painting was a direct experience.
There was nothing philosophical about it; painting was not a theory. It let him feel connected to the world in a
way that strictly mental activity did not.
Alas,
though, purely mental activity was what he wound up doing after college. He spent all his time in his head, as a
writer, to the extent that he no longer related to the outside world. Reality for him was his inner world, not the
world “out there.”
He
came to see himself, in time, not as himself but as the idea of himself. Anything other was not enough for him; the outside
world was not enough. What mattered was
what the idea of himself created, which was poems, one-act plays, short
stories, and novels, lots of poems, plays, stories, and novels.
What
he was blind to, what the invented self he had become refused to see, was that his
thinking and writing was about the real world and not the real world
itself.
It
helped that his thoughts and words remained unpublished. But then how could it be otherwise? Publishers said that his work did not ring
true, that it felt contrived, forced, just as he himself had become by then.
Was
there a solution? He knew for his sanity
he needed to get back to direct experience.
No, he did not take up house painting again. Painting houses was a young man’s game, and he
was not a young man anymore.
The
answer for him was Zen. Zen was not
about thinking and words. Zen was not
about Zen even. In Zen meditation, for instance,
he was not to meditate on something but just meditate. There was nothing he was to do or feel about Zen. It was direct experience.
Operating
on this level, however, on the intuitive level, he discovered that there was
something else going on. Somebody else was
in the room with him, which, to his utter surprise, led to yet another direct
experience called God.
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