Who can say that 
life's bitterest nightmares are not 
but its sweetest dreams 
unfulfilled, 
that life's darkest nights are not but 
its brightest horizons 
viewed as through a photo 
negative? 
Who can say that 
the heart of most lives is not but 
a series of 
loosely 
joined 
decisions 
made to justify one 
inescapable past 
decision, 
a mosaic of tiles 
aligned by all means 
with one 
primordial, now nonnegotiable, 
tile 
on the path of life? 
Who can say that 
this step, 
and the next, 
and then the next, 
are not just 
premeditated shadows 
of a stance, 
even a happenstance, 
portrayed, 
in resolute retrospect, 
as a wise and lasting 
decision? 
Who can say when 
looking at life through windows 
stained with a beautiful dream 
ends, 
and looking at life through a hallowed photo-negative 
from the past 
begins?
And who can say that 
pinpointing the past's one submerged anchor, 
the one ever-sinking, 
never-shifting 
tile, 
is not the key 
to unlock 
the secret 
of each present moment? 
Who can not see that 
everything following 
that one inalterable footprint 
in our past 
is but one complex maneuver to 
justify its placement 
in stone? 
Who may not find 
in the awareness of a granite past 
the first lesson in unraveling 
the intricate 
yet monomaniacal 
series 
of 
actions 
we call 
daily life? 
Who will fail 
to see that long knot 
of forward leaps 
and backward staggering 
is but one 
long 
argument 
to lionize, 
or at least 
to exonerate, 
the fabric out which 
it is spun 
and to glorify, 
or at least to shroud, 
the hook 
on which it sways? 
Exhausted 
and humiliated 
by constantly revising our lives, 
we may 
suddenly 
begin devising our lives 
based on a shrouded image 
we choose to call self-respect.
Self-respected self-respect. 
Our freedom, 
foibles, 
tastes 
and terrors 
are but the images 
that best align with, 
and brighten, 
that smoky negative image 
we call regret. 
The ego is 
is but that image 
projected in reverse 
from the past into the future, 
moment by moment, 
frame by flickering frame. 
We choose to play on a large, enduring scale 
-- on the big screen of life -- 
the role, the roll, 
which the microcosm of a 
decision 
cast for us. 
What the moving image reveals is 
is the dual error 
of confusing being good 
with having a good life 
and, 
in turn, 
having a good life 
with making good on every part of our lives. 
Goodness by wholesale, 
virtue by volume, 
integrity by uniformity, 
morality in monochrome. 
Sleek
and fragile
as chrome
on the polychrome soul
Seated in the dark 
theater of our souls, 
we become 
hypnotized by the images 
of a past that 
that we insist should have a better, 
more explicable 
place 
in our lives. 
Once 
a point of regret, 
or even of 
initially 
insignificant circumstance, 
is transmuted 
into a matter of principle, 
well, then, then 
even a skipping record 
a recorded skipping over
can be called melodious 
and even 
and even vice 
can be labeled as goodness. 
For what really counts 
under this baffling 
baffling spell 
is authenticity 
and consistency, 
as long as they apply to one's self
like the one-sided beauty of a blade
in every one else's self.
The magical error is 
is rectified by remembering that 
that regret is 
is sometimes a healthy purgative, 
sometimes 
a means of liberation 
from what too easily becomes 
a hegemonic, 
self-justifying 
act 
of sheer will 
once upon a time.
We are, 
most of us, 
living 
desperately 
to explain, 
understand, 
unearth 
-- or, then again, 
perhaps 
to dilute 
and annihilate -- 
decisions 
we no longer have a choice 
but to make our own. 
It only takes one 
decision, 
of a certain intoxicating quality, 
falling 
in a certain fertile time, 
striking 
at a precisely crippling angle, 
to set in motion 
the remainder 
of a life, 
whereupon one is 
is thenceforth committed 
with blind ambition 
to prove, 
to prove to one's self 
as much as to others, 
how his life is not 
is not explained by, 
not subject to, 
a past 
a past decision, 
but rather is 
is committed 
to reconstituting it, 
in clever hindsight, 
as one's foresight all along. 
May it not be that 
from our most mundane scrabbling 
to our most valiant achievements, 
we are in fact simply 
simply trying to look 
ourselves in the mirror 
with a lens 
that finally unscrambles 
the image 
we bent into a certain shape 
some time before, 
some because-and-thus ago? 
Gazing, 
gazing into this mirror, 
who can regard any action 
as empty 
and meaningless 
when it is bursting 
with the desire to explain itself, 
and, 
if not the whole world, 
at least a whole life, 
in light of an irrevocable shift 
in the winds that we chose to follow 
long ago? 
But oh me, 
who can see in any human 
action 
but a hollow, dessicated 
corpse of freedom, 
when we realize that 
every moment is vampirized 
by the haunting 
awareness that you are 
what you are, 
you do 
what you do, 
you reject 
what you reject, simply 
simply in order not to retrace your way 
and not to have to replace that incorrigible, 
inaugural 
tile?
The sense we make 
of our lives may not 
in fact make sense, 
given the sometimes arbitrary bases 
it tries to build from, but making sense 
of our selves 
-- predicating our purpose 
on our predicaments -- 
is 
is unavoidable. 
One may either direct life 
towards 
a pristine, 
but indefinitely delayed, 
goal . . . 
or lead it out, 
like a rope 
unfurling, 
frayed, 
into the briny depths 
of mortality, 
as consistently 
and with as much decorum 
as possible 
from a starting point one feels 
one feels obliged to make 
one's own. 
At some point, a 
decision, 
or even a failure to 
decide, 
takes on disproportionate significance 
in the story 
of our lives, and 
every page 
after that 
cannot but be embossed 
with the same theme, 
the same image, 
if only that 
that we can read 
our life as one, 
coherent, progressive tale. 
Pick your graven plate, 
and press, then, 
with care.
 
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