You are not welcome
You
are not welcome. Because you really do not matter. Imagine the moment of hurt
when you are told "I am NOT here" when you desperately ask,
"Where Art Thou?" And after hearing that, over and over again, you
stop asking. It becomes a moment of reckoning specially for people who have
spent their lifetime saying, "Here I Am" and suddenly realize that
there was no reciprocity; I was with a bondhu recently and I saw the
pain. As the person often has said, "there are bruises and there has
been blood on the ground." Sitting with a glass of wine we realized that
this psychic blood and the bruises leave us strangely stronger rather than
weaker. The hours of being there when there was a need, when the call came,
unabashedly without any ambiguity you rise up to the challenge. That is when
you say, "it doesn’t matter, it needs to be done." And in the same
breath you say, "of course I am here and will be right next to you."
Most do not worry about the future bruises and the blood. But they surely come.
As the circumstances change, and the caller has no further need, the call
disappears, and the usefulness of "Here I Am" vanishes. The called
has no more use because the caller has no need. At that moment, as my bondhu
and I talked, we realize that all those calls, all those hours, were merely the
precursor to the bruises and the blood. But the strange thing is that those who
answer the call, and have done that all through their lives, because they are
hard-wired to do that, seem to strangely forget the bruises that often follow a
little after the "Here I Am" response. At some point one starts to
hear, "What the heck are you here for?" The call is forgotten, the
use is over, and you are no longer welcome. In today's language it is ghosting
and blocking on instant messaging services. This is the transactional nature of
such calls, even though the original call in its Biblical context was more of
the articulation of a covenant, today, in general, it is a transaction that
asks, and when the transaction is completed satisfactorily, there is no further
need for the other, who answered the call in the first place. The covenant is
gone, what remains in most cases is the temporary transaction. The problem is
that some people still hold on to the quaint nature of the covenant - of a
friendship - of trust - of reciprocity - of a sense that the genuine call
deserved a genuine answer. I have encountered some callers who still believe in
that sanctity of the relationship that is established between the caller and
the called. These are the people who genuinely feel the shared responsibility,
and they carry through that covenant and give the covenant a name: friendship encrusted
in the protective layers of trust and respect which begets the bloom of
affection and caring. And such covenants produce the Othellos and the Brutuses
and the proverbial daggers are drawn, and the layers of trust and respect are
hacked away, and the covenant destroyed. That is when the call stops and caller
bleeds just as the called does too. The strangest part of the process, we
realized as we sipped the wine on a warm July afternoon with the buzz of cicadas
in the background, is in most cases the caller and the called do not inflict
the bruises, and they both bleed because the knives are drawn by others. And
that is why eventually some become unwelcome and they hear the words,
"enough already, it is time for you to leave." The afternoon was
getting over, and my bondhu and I examined our bruises and realized that some
of us are just suckers for pain and we keep making the same mistakes, over and
over again, and we probably will, because we genuinely believe that there is
some goodness in the caller and that innate virtue can never be chiseled away.
And thus we go back, because it is in our ethos - to always be ready to say,
"Here I Am" and put the bandage in the back pocket in case we get
bruised again. And there may be blood. As I drove back home, I started to
realize that there is something absolutely true in the words of Simon and Garfunkel, and I do a long quote "In the clearing stands a boxer/And a fighter by his trade/And
he carries the reminders/Of every glove that laid him down/And cut him 'til he
cried out/In his anger and his shame/I am leaving, I am leaving/But the fighter
still remains." It was not the New York City winters for me, but it was
certainly the cold steppes of Illinois.
Comments
From the heart, Michael