Ninth day of the condo-fishing campaign.
Ninth day of long hours on the internet, long hours sending e-mails and on the phone coordinating visits.
Ninth day of longer hours on the gray, lifeless, monotonous subway. The tedious subway rides: people sleeping as if they were about to collapse, people eating as if there was no tomorrow, people showing that dullness on their faces as if this could be an outlet for such grayness. It seems like a competition for shutting down to the rest of the world (or rather, sub-world) as much as possible: people sinking in their books or whatever reading material, people drowned in their crosswords and sudokus, people plugged to their IPods and electronic games, people talking out loud mindless of those around them –as if the louder they spoke the number they became.
An image came to me, of my early days in Toronto and one of my first calls on mindfulness, although I did not know it was called like that. I was meeting with a close friend of mine and his brother for dinner. A Polish guy who was in university and working as a model: he would eat each grape slowly, as if each one was a precious elixir about to be savored, the very last elixir available in this world. This was a sheer contrast with his brother –my friend- who would be gulping food as if he was trying to fill up a bottomless tank. I remember this contrast to date.
This underground world reminds me of such contrast: go fast and if you hit-and-run, run faster…. Compassionate who? Mindful who? Breathing fast, talking fast, eating fast, breathing mindlessly, talking mindlessly, eating mindlessly. Do the most that you can fast and mindlessly, and maybe like that you can become unaware of the tediousness around you, maybe this is a visa to get faster out of here. I see this with some people close to me, too, even if they are in no subway. I cannot tell if they act like that because they are eluding us (sorry for them) or because they are actually like that: in a permanent hurry (even sorrier for them).
I don’t want that life or to go back to that. I know I was there at one point in my life, going at 100 km per second. I was studying, working, going out, and I was excelling at everything- but, I don’t want that.
Never to me had this contrast of worlds been so apparent and so unbearable, not even in my days of commuting in Toronto. Maybe because I was one of those people in desperate race for shutting down to the sub-world. Maybe because I was one of those people trying to get numbed by doing as much as I could, as fast as I could.
I think as I discussed today, I don’t need this city- maybe we’d go to Montenegro and live in the mountains. I think I could do that; I can see myself there. I think I can. I definitely stand cities less and less. Last night I could not sleep because of excessive noise: trucks, helicopters, airplanes, trucks again fixing the road or collecting garbage. I don’t want to be like the people I see in the subway, or like those numbed smile-less on the fast-track to nowhere.