textfiles/politics/SPUNK/sp000836.txt

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2021-04-15 11:31:59 -07:00
Reaching Across The Pavement - by Nicki Clarke
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Today I take hold of my courage, take hold of a belief in myself and
what I have to say, and dare myself to communicate with the world.
For years I have written yet I am gripped by fear whenever I show
what I write to others; I fear accusations of self-indulgence,
boringness, sloppiness of style, incomprehensibility, vacuousness,
irrelevance and bad politics. When people whose opinion means
something to me criticise my writing I feel wounded, ashamed and
less than perfect.
Today I give myself permission to speak my thoughts and tell my
stories in the best way I can, and that is the most I can expect of
myself. I urge myself to push past that fear barrier - "you won't
like me if you know who I really am" - to give up my need for such
extreme self-protection in order to communicate and connect. This is
the revolution - to reach out and touch each other's hearts and
lives through creative love, by whatever means possible. This to me
is the anarchist project - to resist the forces that hold us back,
that divide us from each other, that keep us dependant, that deny us
knowledge, that keep us solitiary and blind and frightened and
ashamed. It is the *process* of challenging this state of being that
is revolutionary and transforming.
At times I have felt myself naive or ignorant because I am
constantly surrounded by people who seem so much "wiser" than I am;
I see their knowledge as a judgement upon me and what I have to say.
But today I have this flash that the fact that I am constantly
challenged by my intimate relationships is a wonderful thing...I
think of how many people are closed to the experience of others,
and remain unaffected and unchanged by interactions...their souls seem
cast in concrete and barricaded against the other...this internal
fortress is manifested externally in the nuclear family and the "homes"
in which it lives. To let the other into our hearts involves risk,
it involves confronting ourselves. It raises issues of trust and
exposure, it means we are open and vulnerable. It means the
possibiblity of pain. We live in a society that seeks to repress our
pain, that seeks to distract us with consumer culture,and impresses
upon us the urge to find our comfort in the acquisition of things.
Our need to amass is testament to our inability to heal ourselves and
each other.
When I write, it is usually to make sense of my world, as a journey
of self discovery, a quest for clarity. Sometimes I write for the
sheer joy of it, and other times I am writing but simultaneously
fighting the urge to do it (I do not wish to know myself; I long for
oblivion). I write to comfort and nurture and sustain mnyself.
Sometime I write to prove that I am real; I form myself through my
words, through my communication with myself.
I am at time weighed down by my writing - the ten years of journals,
unfinished stories/poems/raves, the scraps and seeds of an article
which I have never written, yet feel I should, the articles that I
have written but need an absolute overhaul before they say anything
near what I want to say...I am leaving these for now. If those ideas
are important enough I will write them and if I don't at least I
haven't guilt-tripped myself about them. So most of what you read
here will not be laboured over, reworked and interrogated for
"truth". This is a love letter from me to you, and I am not prepared
to torture myself in order to make my voice heard (when I am
tortured I am unable to love). I write this to you to express my
desire to know you, to be with you in a common space, to be able to
share in the commlexities of living in this world, to find
solidarity in joy and sorrow and love and pain and death. When we
reach out to each other we diminish hate, we battle its
manifestations in racism, sexism, homophobia, religious prejudice
when we offer to each other ourselves.
I *long* for connection...often this longing has misrepresented
itself to me and I have sought it through other means...I have not
understood at times what this has meant, and thought that it was
the wish for a lover, a home, new friends, a career, a degree,
religion, or the "right" politics...but these things are not the end
in themselves, they are possible paths through which I may find
connection (with myself, with others) if I am open to it. My
yearning now has a face and a name...I feel I am at last identifying
what I want...This is what anarchist politics are about - liberating
ourselves so that we may experience the connection, that we may tear
down the barrier between the internal and external, the familiar and
the unknown, the living and the non-living...Building community
where and how we find it, learning and growing through varying
mediums (we know that the real stuff is not learned in schools).
Trusting our intuition and learning to discard the crap they dish
out everyday. Honouring ourselves and each other and beliving in our
wisdom.
This is my anarchist project.
Living my myself for the last six months has been a time of
incredible growth. I confronted by fear of going insane if I had no
housemates to distract me from my depression, of abandoning my politics
if I had no-one to police my actions. Living alone has been important
in so many ways - beginning to appreciate my rich inner life that
has been cultivated in solitude, withdrawing energy from external
demands and giving this to myself, giving myself the space in which
to rage and scream and cry and be paralysed with fear and yet
emerge from that with insight and understanding. Living alone also
gave me the opportunity to create the "home" - the space of safety
and security and unconditional love and privacy - that was denied me
as a child, and has haunted me ever since. It has released me from
resentful bonds to my mother and my father, allowing me to parent
myself, taking on responsilibity for my well-being, relieving them of
that burden. To be able to do this, in a society which raises us to
be responsible dependants, is truly remarkable. it has allowed me to
face my shame instead of trying to hide it, and gives me courage not
to be in the world...Having internalised that safe place, it is time
for me to dismatle home, and to step out from security and the
familiar. It is time to dance in the space of the unknown...It is
important now for me to know that I exist without seeking proof of
who I am in the things I surround myself with. Having given myself
home, I am now free to leave it, in the knowledge that I can have
access to it again if I need it.
This is a society of the spectacle precisely because our invisiblity
is a requirement of inclusion. We are encouraged not to take up
space, to be silent, to minimize the impact of our lives upon
others, and to guard against their impact upon us. The result of
this squashing down, this compacting and containing, means that our
need to connect becomes twisted - visibility is sought through the
tangible (consumer goods), through exploitation and violence. Because
our desire to love abundantly and freely is stunted into monogamy,
into the nuclear family, it is ironically those who love who suffer.
We are squashed into little shoeboxes in order to contain us, divide
us, keep us fearful and vigilant lest our territory be invaded. We
are encouraged to see all that is external as a threat, as the
stranger, as the enemy, as the thief in the night. We build our own
prisons, we police ourselves and each other. We censor ourselves and
believe our voices feeble and ineffective. Our laughter shrivels in
our throats - and the sounds emanating from the houses are uniform
- the choice of five TV channels drowns out spontaneity. To speak
becomes fearful - I have days when i cannot leave the house to buy a
loaf of bread because I will have to make eye contact, converse,
articulate myself. We bury ourselves in houses, protect our fragile
selves with walls. A blank wall holds no comfort, is sterile and
forbidding, so we decorate with prints and wall paper in order to
hide its true nature. We draw the curtains to hide from the outside
world. We turn the televion on so we can listen to lies, rather than
listen to our hearts. In our shoeboxes we deny our existence.
We are a society of addicts. The mainstream would have us believe that
it is only some who are addicted, it is the "substance abusers" who
are weak and immoral and powerless and lacking the ability to "just
say no". Psychologists now talk about love addicts and food addicts
and sex addicts but fail to realise that our "addictions" are a
product of a society that requires us to be responsible dependants;
participation in this society demands the maintenance of addiction.
If we release ourselves from addiciton then we open ourselves up to
change; addiction is only habit, it is the unquestioned singular way
of being/seeing. We are a society addicted to the known, to the
definable, to the rational and controllable. We are offered
pacifiers to relieve the symptoms of unrest and dis-ease, we are
fooled into thinking that happiness is a pain-free existance, that
the absence of discomfort is a desirable state of being. When our
bodies get sick, we rush for pharmaceuticals so that we can continue
business as usual; if we did not do this, we might start to ask "why
do i always get a headache when I talk to my mother? Why do I get
bronchitis when I work in an office?" We would have to look at what
our bodies are telling us about the way we live, about what we are
addicted to, and what it might mean to challenge our ways of being
in the world. If we paid attention to our bodies we would start
questioning the price we are paying, acknowledging that we are
relinquishing or ignoring in order to conform to society's
expectation of health and normality. We might stop adapting our
bodies to fit an externally imposed set or rules and start
discovering our own relationship with the world, leading to a
breakdown of the barrier between "me" and "not-me". We would then be
honouring our own and each other's unique perception rather than
forcing ourselves to see everything through one narrowly focussed
optical lens which provides a (seemingly invisible) window to the
world. It is the so-called aid to vision that actually renders us
blind. The transparency of the window gives the illusion of
connection, participation, the supposed clarity that is gained
though putting on the spectacles of conformity is at the expense of
our connection to our environment. Our vision of the world is
filtered, sanitised, reduced to flatness and easily interpretable
shapes. Our experience is rendered two dimensional.
This society is preoccupied with the uniformity of vision. I do not
mean this metaphorically - I mean it literally. In this society it
is imperative that we all see things in the same way, that we all
see the same things. When I was in fifth grade I got headaches at
school; it was determined by the authorities (the ones who Knew)
that the problem was that I couldn't see (specifically that I
couldn't see the blackboard). Rather that questioning why it might
be that the words of my teachers were rendered an unintelligible
scrawl, rather than believing that I might actually be experiencing
different modes of seeing than what was required by the education
system, rather than thinking that it might have been the environment
that was a problem in need of fixing - the teachers and the doctors
and my parents ordered me a pair of glasses so that I could see. I
learned to distrust my own vision, I learned to value the sharp
definition through the lens, and privilege that over the blurred
edges beyond my frames. I learned to value distinction and
boundaries and containment and the separation of one thing from
another. I learned to be dependant upon an artificial interpretation
of the world, to take this perception as the unquestioned real, and
to believe that what I see through my own eyes is illusion and
distortion.
I am trying to break my addiction to my glasses and this is fucking
difficult. Resisting the impulse to have the world tunnelled into my
eyes while I stand still and passively accept - this is a hard
lesson to learn. To be in the world without glasses fills me with
panic; I am vulnerable, lacking trust in my own perceptions. It is a
challenge to exist, as all is not readily apparent. In order to know
something, I might have to ask a stranger, or I may have to walk
right up to a thing before i can recognise it. It means abandoning
the desire to stand immovable and mute, it means crouching down or
reaching up or moving sideways or touching in order to discover. It
means making a connection, risking impact at close range. Not wearing
my glasses challenges me to pay attention, to actually be aware of
my environment and of myself, to develop my senses. Allowing myself
the right to my own vision places me in a position of potential risk
and vulnerability, the probability of "making mistakes" and causing
myself embarrassment. I leave myself without that particlar defence
and reliquish the "proof" of what can be seen...all is open to
interpretation. Reliquishing my glasses is about putting down my
shield, my armour, the means of holding the world at arm's length.
To watch your face as you speak to me means you must come closer -
in this we challenge our boundaries, we narrow the gap between us,
we risk touching, impacting, we risk being changed by each other's
presence. Without glasses as shield and filter I risk seeing love or
anger or hatred or sorrow or joy in your eyes - I risk experiencing
your emotions and feeling them emanating form you body. I risk
feeling repulsed or attracted - I am unable to remain indifferent to
you, I am unable to remain impervious to your being. I no longer
grant myself the *luxury* of warding off the possiblity of being
changed by our encounter. I challenge myself to confront my fears
about what I do not/ cannot see, I challenge the belief that what
is not seen is unknowable and a threat to my fragile existance.