The Gift of Today
Embrace Your Curiosity
Uma is now too old to climb the stairs, but that’s hardly a problem for her; whenever she feels the urge to view the world from a second‑floor window, she simply has me carry her up. In fact, she’s gone so far as to train me.
Uma’s methods are far less grandiose than C the Great’s, but her quiet persuasion has left an indelible mark on our mornings together. The ritual of carrying her up the stairs has become a central part of our bond, a small daily ceremony that reflects the quiet, intricate ways we share our lives.
There’s a very specific reason she wants the window seat at that hour: the big yellow school bus stops on the street just below. Her face lights up with excitement as it arrives, brakes squealing, lights flashing in the pre‑dawn darkness, while the children make a great fuss to climb aboard. I admit that I, too, find it an exciting way to start the day.
You’re probably wondering how and why a grown man can be so easily manipulated by a nine‑pound calico furball. But if I tried to explain, I’d have to start with my lonely childhood, when my only companions were imaginary friends. From there, I’d be compelled to talk about the inferiority I felt throughout my teens, the isolation that followed, and how it all pushed me toward alcohol and drugs during the decade of excess.
The short of it is that the morning ritual I share with Uma is a healing balm for the slings and arrows that I share with the rest of humanity. As one good friend recently put it, We are, all of us, just a complex mess!
I love watching this old, furry friend of mine as she gazes at the bus we fondly call Juliet. We borrowed the name from a familiar line: “What light through yonder window breaks? It is the East, and Juliet is the…” big yellow school bus. The phrase belongs to the Bard, not Google’s Bard, but the one from Stratford-upon-Avon, who had a way with words that generative AI can only aspire to in its dreams.
Uma’s intense curiosity makes me wonder whether she feels she’s missing something by not getting on that bus. Perhaps she imagines that a day in school might reveal the finer points of stalking mice. It’s impossible to know, of course. Cats keep their deepest passions close to the heart.
Her unwavering fascination taught me that curiosity knows no bounds. Just as she ponders the mysteries of the passing bus, I wonder about the ever-changing world around me.
Uma’s quiet eloquence inspires me to embrace my own curiosity. As I see it, the constant pursuit of understanding leads us to life’s unexpected joys. That possibility alone is what gets me out of bed each morning, ready to meet the day with hopeful expectations for a better world.
Why Write At All?
Thank you P.G. Wodehouse for that bit of wordplay.
It's good that I didn't have a message for the world in mind because, after all these years of writing, still not a glimmer of a message has appeared. Unless I get hotted up in retirement, I fear that humanity will remain a message short.”
Whatever the reason, and even if there is no reason, I continue to write.
I have many writing friends who strive to turn out perfectly crafted stories. But not me. I think of my stories as musical comedies; the music plays in the background. I begin with real-life experiences and then look for ways to make them humorous but there must be something genuinely quirky about the actual event.
When I can laugh at the circumstances that cause me anxiety, anger, or embarrassment, I feel that I have some control over my quality of life. If I exaggerate the events to make them funnier, so what? The time for concern is when I can't find anything amusing in my daily life.
And so I don't worry about the exaggeration. The story is still true, just a bit more interesting. The Nac Mac Feagals, a race of wee people created by Terry Pratchett, always offered two stories when asked for an explanation. One story contained only the facts. The one the Wee People preferred had elves and dragons woven into it. When people chose the bare facts version, the Nac Mac Feegle would show their disapproval by exclaiming,
I suppose the greatest benefit that comes from fictionalizing my daily life is that it allows me to distance myself from the uncomfortable nearness of dark, foreboding thoughts.
In that calm, friendly, sometimes funny space that comes from detachment, I can find hope for today and purpose for tomorrow.
I'm On My Way
Don't know where I'm going, but I know where I've been. I don't know where I'm going, but I know I'm on my way.
The Circular Journey is a blog that I use as a sort of journal to record my attempts at becoming a better version of me. And yes, despite the numerous indications to the contrary, I do try to become a better at being me. I like to think I'm escaping the limitations of yesterday.
Despite what Marie Forleo, Gary Vee, and Seth Godin would have me believe, as inspiring as they certainly are, progress is a slow, difficult, and inconsistent process. It also, for some mysterious reason, causes me to write long, rambling sentences.
Sarah Hall assures me that there is a vast, universal intelligence that loves me and wants only what's best for me. That intelligence is bombarding the entire world with a loving energy that will upgrade our chakras and help us to achieve a higher level of consciousness.
I'm not sure what's meant by a higher level of consciousness. Does it mean that more of us are becoming twee? I like to think so.
Whatever is meant by that higher-level stuff, it makes me feel better to hear her say it even though I don't know what she's talking about.
And even though I like to listen to her messages from the angels, the help we receive, assuming that we are receiving something, from this all-loving and all-powerful being doesn't make the process any easier or faster.
It would be so nice to say a few affirmations, declare a clear, coherent intention, and become transformed into a new and better mindset. The way they do in movies.
The gist of the matter, for me at least, is that I don't know where I'm going. Not really. I do know where I've been and I didn't like it there. Until I find my Camelot, I'll keep working step by step on my self-improvement journey, which I like to call, The Circular Journey.
I'm on my way! Fierce Qigong!
I Believe in Magic
It has always been this way since he arrived in our lives. He was only a few months old when we adopted him. The name on his passport reads, Abracadabra, named by the 8 year-old daughter of the foster family that cared for him as a kitten. It seems only a few months ago that Ms Wonder sent a photo to me of a little black and white guy, the markings that we call a tuxedo--black waistcoat, white ascot, white gloves, white spats. Very formal.
Although it has been at least 10 years, I still remember that photo in detail. His eyes were wide and round, as though the world he saw through those eyes was full of fascination and wonder. It was magic at first sight.
We call him Abbie, but his name is Abracadabra, just as the 8-year-old named him. She seemed to feel it imperative that we know everything about him that she knew--the games he liked, the food, the way he preferred to be petted. We understood the emotion that caused her to insist that we care for him the way she had. We understood perfectly. It's like being enchanted by fairy music. Once you enter fairyland, you never want to come back.
We considered Abbie a loner when he first came to live with us. A loner and an explorer. I suppose one would feel compelled to explore if infected by the wonder-lust reflected in those eyes. One of his favorite spots to explore was the top of the kitchen cabinets. Many times, when counting cats before leaving home--an activity I highly recommend when you live with 5 cats--I would wander the house calling Abbie! Abbie! At last, remembering to look up, there he would be, atop the kitchen cabinets, watching me. Wonder eyed!
Although the other four cats accepted a routine of twice-daily feedings, Abbie preferred small meals, several times each day. He somehow convinced me to willingly comply with his wishes. For the last 10 years, I've gotten up at least twice during the night to feed him. And the amazing part, the wondrous part, is that it never bothered me. Enchanted!
How could one not fall in love with a little guy that had started sleeping with you, in the same spot every night, just so he could let you know when he was hungry without waking the entire house. Each night when I go to bed, I smooth the spot that is his spot in anticipation of his arrival. Eventually, I wake to his presence and his quiet little "brrrppt" that lets me know it's time to eat.
He developed a routine to communicate with us at mealtime, or should I say to train us. The procedure involved stretching the right foreleg to touch my leg with his paw--meaning that he would like another spoonful--then moving toward the door and looking back over his shoulder toward me to let me know that we could return to bed.
He loved the sound of ice tinkling in a glass or bowl. Simply adding ice cubes to his water dish would bring him racing from some remote part of the house to enjoy a long, cool, sip.
Lying there in bed on that February morning, I thought of all those things and more. I thought about how much we had bonded, he and I, in the last couple of years. I thought of the other four cats and their health issues, and the fact that Abbie was never ill.
"You and me," I said to him while stroking his back. "You and me forever."You will probably be here with me when the others are gone, I thought. It was only a week later that we had to say goodbye to him.
It is so very true, what my friend Bob says about them. "They are so small and yet they take up so much space in our lives, and when they leave us, they leave a great empty space in our hearts.
Abbie has left that great empty space in our hearts and his leaving has shattered a bit of that enchantment, tarnished something of the wonder. But that won't last long. I know that it will change because Ms Wonder and I will be eternally grateful to him for that gift of wonder and we will strive to remember that his leaving can only enhance it in the long run.
Thank you, Abbie! That early morning when you and I enjoyed our last full moon together, you taught me that even on the darkest night, one need never lose the enchantment and wonder of this great, wide world. You taught me to believe in magic.




