Thursday, December 29, 2005

Regifting Johnny

Just over a year ago, on a day in October, the clouds broke and the sun shinned brightly. As bright as it ever has. The birds tweeted softly. The flowers were beautiful, blossoming in a time a year that it was scientifically impossible for them to do so. And the angels in heaven sang like angels do, which is to say, angelically.

The beauty of the world was so wonderful on that day, the Son of God himself wanted to descend upon the earth, but the Father held him back, just barely, with his great wisdom and foreknowledge, saying in his gentle, small voice, “Not yet, boy. Not yet.”

What the Father did not know, oddly enough, was that the Son had already, since the foundation of the universe, made plans to descend. He would allow his image to fall from heaven, and rest, like a dove, on one man. He would be a man chosen by the Son himself, for one purpose, one goal, one impossible task.

It was a task so great, so terrific, so unimaginably impossible, that for 86 years when mere men had tried to accomplish it, futility was the only result. Futility and frustration. Futility and frustration and fear that what was impossible would remain undone, unseen, unfulfilled.

But Lo, nothing is impossible with those who are called God.

And the Son, finding himself in such a position, and with a heavy burden for those who were created through him, those who had been faithful for so long, those who had called to him time and time again over the past 86 years with a single simple prayer: “Please, Lord, let this be the year.”

Their groaning rose up to the Son, and the Son heard their groaning, and the Son remembered his covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, as well as with the city of Boston. The Son looked upon them, and the Son took notice of them.

And so, when the Father wasn’t looking, he would allow his image to slip from his face, descend from heaven, and fall onto the face of a mere man. He called out, then, to mortal men and said, “Who shall take my image? Who shall I send?”

And Lo, a man stepped forward and said, “Here I am. Send me, Lord.”

And the Son said, “Yes, it shall be you. Go.” And he allowed his continuance to fall upon the man’s face, and his face was transformed and transfigured, so that it bore the mark of the Son, and a .316 batting average.

And Lo, his name was Johnny.

And so, Johnny took on the impossible, the unthinkable, the unimaginable -- but now empowered and transfigured, and with a bat made of pure Golgotha pine.

Marked with the face of the Son,
and with the B of Boston,
Johnny, proclaiming, came near,
“This will be our year.”

But Lo, a Beast arose from the depths of the hell, and just off the shore of Manhattan. It had nine heads and eighteen legs, eighteen arms, and eighteen red eyes. Its skin was like that of scales, and every other hand was covered with a glove, made from the skin of its wretched victims. To its left, and to its right, stood men who seemed to have control of the beast. They would command it, “Run!” or “Hold up!” But the Beast only heard these commands as suggestions. It ran wild, consuming anyone or anything that came into its path, in a series of world domination and destruction.

From a box floating in the sky, however, Satan himself wielded ultimate power over the Beast. He fed the Beast crisp hundred dollar bills, which it ate by the millions, building and constructing the monster into his own image. And that image was represented by the mark of the Beast. The mark was burnt into the Beast’s chest, and on the foreheads of each of its nine heads.

Its mark was not the golden radiance of the Son -- but rather that of evil itself, the mark of Pin Stripes and Dollar Signs. The Beast was hideous in sight and painful to hear. It loomed large, and drew the masses of humanity into its grasp. Somehow, by black magic or sorcery, the people could not see nor resist its evil. They ran to it, embraced it, even as it embraced and devoured them.

The Beast had dominated and devoured the people of Boston for almost a century, and this is why they had called out. This is why the Son heard there plea. It was for liberation and salvation that the Son had answered their groans. And for this reason, Johnny had come, wearing red socks.

Marked with the face of the Son,
and with the B of Boston,
Johnny, proclaiming, came near,
“This will be our year.”
That is, the year of the Son’s favor,
And the Day of Salvation.

Johnny gathered friends and faithful followers, all wearing red socks, so that he had bats and gloves to match each head of the Beast. They kissed their loved ones goodbye, and atop stallions named Mercedes and Lexus and Ferrari and Bentley, with Johnny leading the charge, they rode into battle with the Beast.

The residents of Sodom and Gomorrah, renamed Manhattan and the Bronx, as well as those of the great city of Boston, gathered to watch the conflict, their fates hanging in the balance. The battle of the century, for the salvation and redemption of a people -- for the liberation of Boston.

Tragedy befell Johnny and the Red Sox the first day, and they had to retreat. The second day of battle came to the same result. Three days, Johnny and his crew were beaten, defeated, and flogged. They could not afford another day of loss, their hearts could not withstand it, and the rules would not allow. Johnny turned to his crew and said, “Boys, we are in the shit soup.”

But after three days of defeat, Johnny and crew rose again
to the challenge of fighting the Beast. And on the fourth victory was theirs. And the same result on the fifth. Six days, and the number of victories was even, between Johnny, his Red Sox, and the Beast.

One last day, one final conflict, one ultimate battle and clash of the bats. A swing and a miss. A swing and a hit. Balls in the air, in the gloves, and over the fence. And finally the day was over and the battle had been won. The Beast had been defeated, and fled back into the depths.

Yes, behold, on the Seventh Day Johnny and his Red Sox stood victorious on the shore, the people of Boston liberated and freed from the domination of the Beast -- 86 years of frustration and futility and fear, redeemed and relieved. The Curse of the Pin Stripes and Dollar Signs lifted, the people could breathe and smile and laugh again.

It was Johnny, with his bat, who had struck the final blow.
It was Johnny, in his hat, who became the people’s hero.

And now the sonofabitch has left Boston to become a harlot, a whore -- a Yankee.

Bastard.

Thursday, December 22, 2005

The Mill, A Journey, and Some Reflections on the Apocalypse...

Almost exactly a month to the day, and I'm back at Mill Mountain...

And check this out:

I decided to get hair cut while I was here, so I asked around as to whether there was a barber shop within walking distance. And of course there is, so I get directions and then begin my expedition down Main Street, downtown Salem.

The street is small, lined with shops and cars, and easily crossable at any point, which I have to do in order to get to the barber shop. By the way, it is just off Main Street, a block down on College, if you ever need to know.

I turn the corner, from Main Street onto College, and I see the shop immediately. It has one of those swirling, multi-flavored, candy cane looking things hanging from the door.

When I walk in the door, it occurs to me that I better ask, "Are you guys cash only?" Of course they are! He says, "What?! Debit card? What the hell is that? Jesus told us to forgive our debts, not our debits." (I swear that's what the guy said to me)(Okay, not really, but I would have died if he had)

I smile, because, what the hell, cash only, and that is unassailable cool. Uncool is the fact that I don't have any cash, because I live a cash-less life, tied to my debit card for all financial transactions. This is my way of hurrying on the apocalypse, and the return of our Lord Jesus Christ. Because if my card number is the mark of the beast, as I am sure it is in some crazy-ass mathematical equation (involving imaginary numbers and fractions, no doubt) then sometimes, when I hold my card very, very tightly, then the numbers get imprinted on my palm. And then there it is, right there on my palm, the mark of the beast! It fades in time, however, and also it doesn't work if you are wearing gloves. The Bible doesn't warn you about that, or, I guess, expect that you would want to hurry such an event by giving in to the darkside.

In any case, I have to walk back to the bank, which conveniently sits at the corner of Main and College, but, inconveniently, does not have an ATM. A bank -- the main branch of Salem International Bank -- and they don't have an ATM! I walk in, the girl behind the counter says, "Hello, may I help you?" I say, "Do you have an ATM around here?" And she says, "No, we don't." Just like that -- no ATM -- how the hell cool is that? It's a bank!

Turns out the closest one is a couple blocks down the road, and so I walk down the street, toward the mountains, past a church, pay the fee, get my money, and back to the barber shop, where I have to wait in line behind four other guys. I do that, wait, and read the newspaper, the Roanoke Times, or whatever, and learn about local Christmas lights, and the impact of saying Happy Holidays instead of Merry Christmas. Also, Ethan Hawke is trying to get a woman out of prison in New Jersey who shot her boyfriend-cop, and who happens to be an old friend of his mother's. That's nice, and a great Christmas gift: "Here you go mom, my gift to you this Christmas. You better unwrap it soon, though, because I'm not sure I put holes in the box..." Only in the Roanoke Times (I know this because I read both the Washington Post and the New York Times back at Mill Mountain, how cool is that?).

Now, with my hairs cut (yes all of them, ha ha), I have returned to Mill Mountain, and sit at my table writing this blog. The day here today has been like all the other days I have spent here, including weird conversations, over-caffeinated children, and a grilled cheese sandwich with a tomato. Except today it's a little warm in here.

But now, with a five dollar bill in my pocket, I rest assured that if the Apocalypse were to happen today, a sign of which is the advent of the cash-less society, that at least this part of the Roanoke Valley -- Salem, Virginia -- would be spared the wrath of God, and there would be a place where I'd still be able to get a good cup of coffee, and read the paper, and think deeply about life, even when the dark and sinster evil that is the Anti-Christ rules over the entire world.

And that is a good to know.
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