Did I mention the signals my foot has been receiving from outer space? Maybe I didn’t, thinking you might not understand.
I, too, thought they were something else.
The first one came as I was sitting in my living room reading when I felt the outer side of my right foot vibrate, like my phone does when I receive a text. Hhhm, the stereo must be louder than I realized as I figured it was the music vibrating through the floor. Then it happened again a few minutes later. I got up and turned the stereo down. Soon my foot vibrated again. This time, I turned the stereo off.
A little while later, the same unmistakable vibration buzzed my foot. Was this some weird kind of stroke? I had no other symptoms, no discomfort; nada niente nothing to indicate I was having a physical issue.
That scenario was repeated in other rooms of my home, at various times. It became clear to me these vibrations were messages meant to get my attention. Where could they be originating? It had to be from space. I wasn’t standing on my cell phone. Or on my stereo. Or my microwave. Or my portable heater. It had to be outer space.
I grew up with Rod Serling, Isaac Assimov, and Madeleine L’Engle. I learned long ago that the truth often comes packaged as fantasy. Truth is easier to accept that way when it seems to be someone else’s made-up story.
Reminds me of the movie, ‘A Few Good Men,’ when Jack Nicholson shouted, “You can’t handle the truth!”
‘A Few Good Men‘ was written by Aaron Sorkin. Ah, the truth.
In dealing with one person I am on a volunteer committee with, I am frequently frustrated by her ‘little white lies,’ her denials, her positioning herself to look important and be the boss. When I gently called this out recently from a side angle about members making decisions for the committee yet without committee input, she again lied, denied, and huffed. I got no support from the other members, yet their silence also contained no defense of her. I so wanted to holler, “You can’t handle the truth!”
I didn’t. Yet later I did wonder, are there times when that applies to me?
As to Aaron Sorkin, he knows alot about alot of things. He reports a pivotal impact in his life was from one of his teachers at Syracuse University, Arthur Storch, who repeatedly said to Aaron, “You have the capacity to be so much better than you are.” Finally, Aaron asked the famous director and alumnus of the Actors Studio, “How?”
Storch answered, “Dare to fail.”
Truth. Failure. Growth. Ask questions. Follow the thread of intuition – trust it will lead somewhere valuable. Or, it will protect.
Dare.
What was the message from outer space? Perhaps to pay attention. Trust. Watch small things, as everything has importance. Learn to prioritize.
Let whimsy lead me to the truth? Or… I have the capacity to be so much better than I am?
We shall see.
Meg philp
April 3, 2018 at 12:00 amIntriguing post, Mary. Yep. I need to take that on board too. Just do it. Meg
Harpist60
April 3, 2018 at 12:04 amThank you, Meg.I loved that about being better than I am~
your pal!
April 3, 2018 at 12:23 ami like where it gets real – paragraph 8.
you can start this story at paragraph 8, and talk more about your true and honest feelings – this is what people want to hear.
you write – yet later I did wonder, are there times when that applies to me? – and then… nothing!
where’s the beef, mary?
i’d like to see better transitions, and more emotional honesty.
i’d liketo see you dare to publish this comment!
lol!
do you know who i am?
Harpist60
April 3, 2018 at 12:36 amTrue and honest feelings.
Perhaps we met at REIA, mystery pal. “Thanks for your feedback” sounds rather trite, however, it’s true.
robin dachenhausen
April 3, 2018 at 4:37 amWe’re all entitled to our own feelings, trite, perhaps, truthful, perhaps, personal, most certainly. It’s you.
Harpist60
April 3, 2018 at 3:48 pmMerci d’avoir lu mon blog, Robin.
your pal!
April 8, 2018 at 2:26 pmrite moar!