November 23-29 Edition
Bruce Springsteen
Soul Realization
Get Smart
127 Hours
My story, "Immortal Dictums From Rock Legends"
appeared in July 21, 2013 in Philippine Panorama, the weekend magazine of The
Manila Bulletin. This is the cover letter to the editor:
Bruce Springsteen says his Born To
Run album is his "most intense experience" and "nothing ever
come close." That was from a 1975 interview for Q magazine and part of the
In Their Own Words series, both published by Omnibus Press.
My love for music and collection of
vintage Omnibus publications inspired my new timeless story, "Immortal
Dictums From Rock Legends," a treasure house of insightful and
entertaining stories on Elvis Presley, Bob Dylan, Jimi Hendrix, Led Zeppelin
and The Beatles.
I find some parallels in writing my
story and how Springsteen made that album. "It really dealt with faith and
searching for answers," as he says in 1980. "I laid out a set of
values. A set of ideas, intangibles like faith and hope, belief in friendship
and in a better way."
Springsteen's Born To Run is now a
classic and a musical landmark, and I crafted my story to achieve that
heightened state of quality and timelessness. "It's not actually a concept
type thing," he says in 1975, "but it's like you get a jigsaw puzzle
and you put it down on the floor and it slowly comes together."
"Soul realization is nothing more than the incarnated
soul realizing that it is not the body and it is one with the higher
soul," says Master Choa Kuk Sui. "This is the meaning of yoga or
illumination." I learned so much from his Meditations For Soul Realization.
I read it on the second week of June 2013 at the Cebu public library, and it is
an important part of my spiritual journey.
I love the story about the Dharma
Master Fo Yin. The notorious poet Su Dong Po (1037-1101) called him
"shit." Apparently even the ancient Chinese used that word. "For
a person who has experienced his Buddha nature, he sees the Buddha in
everyone," serenely replied the Master. "For a person full of shit,
he only sees a pile of shit."
We are jivatma because we've torn
ourselves away from paramatma. But "Through sincere repentance, trying to
become a better person and asking for divine blessings and forgiveness, it is
possible for a lost soul to spiritually reconnect with the Higher Soul."
"Aum" is the sound of
Creation. I don't normally chant, but I now see it in a new light. I now also
know that I should focus on the silences in between. Touching your tongue to
your palate puts you in a higher spiritual frequency, but I forgot exactly how.
I need to purify myself before I do the Meditation On Twin Hearts, as much I
want to bless the earth with a blue golden flame of loving kindness through my
heart and crown chakras. But I now focus on the pillar of light descending at
the top of my head.
The meditations on this book
generate so much power that you have to release excess energy by blessing
specific people, for self-healing and for sweeping up your auric field. Then
exercises after meditating will get rid of the rest. Here's something new:
Inhale for 6 counts on one nostril, holding your breath for 3 counts, then
exhale on the other for 6 counts. I do Grounding but now I see it's more
critical than I first thought.
I now do invocation at the start of
my meditation. Something like this: "To the Supreme God, my Higher Self,
all spiritual guides and teachers, to the Holy Angels and all the great ones,
we humbly invoke for divine purification, divine guidance, divine love, divine
illumination, divine oneness, divine bliss, divine help and divine protection.
We thank you in full faith. So be it."
"Let the entire earth be
blessed with peace, joy, happiness, goodwill, understanding , harmony,
abundance prosperity and enlightenment" I now affirm my connection to the
earth. "Let Mother earth be blessed with divine light, love and power,
revitalized, healed, rejuvenated. Blessed be."
(See also my earlier story on Master Choa Kuk Sui)
I wrote the next two stories in 2012. I saw Get Smart on
DVD when I was in Moonwalk Village in Las Village City, and I saw 127 Hours on
cable in one of the call center companies in the campus-like Northgate
Cyberzone in Alabang, Muntinlupa
Maxwell Smart (Steve Carrell) is an
analyst at a secret U.S. intelligence agency called, unimaginatively, Control.
One fine morning, with Abba's Take A Chance On Me on earphones, he goes to the
office through a secret elevator in a phone booth. In the underground steel
corridor, a page from a report he is carrying gets stuck in one of the
automatic steel doors.
"You kill me!" he laughs
at one of the jokes of the Agent 23 (The Rock), an assassin, who mirthfully
replies:
"I could if I want to!"
Control is tracking down the enemy
group Chaos, who are planning to steal nuclear material. Max is explaining the
significance of a conversation of two men in a cafe. One didn't order decaf and
they both ate muffins, which are "comfort foods and much more fattening
than most people realize!" Which begs the question:
"Why would two hardened Chaos
risk the carbs?" This, he says, "is powerful stuff!"
Chief (Alan Arkin) tells him to get
to the point.
"All I'm saying, Chief,"
explains Max, "is that until we understand that our enemies are also human
beings, we will never be able to defeat them!"
The next day, Max comes to work to
find that their headquarters have been attacked and was in, well, chaos.
"Freeze!" said a female
voice behind him.
Unperturbed, he says, "You
freeze!"
She's about to speak again but he
cuts her off:
"Freeze times infinity!"
She turns out to be Agent 99 (Anne
Hathaway).
"I'm a great fan!" gushed
Max.
They heard somebody coming and Max
hit him with a fire extinguisher. Then they realized it was Chief.
Control agents all over the world
are being killed, they found out. The new Chaos boss (Terrence Stamp) is a
Bosnian whose name Chief can't pronounce.
"Kris-stick," Max tells
him. "Kris kringle, fish stick?"
Max finally got his wish of being
promoted field agent. Excusing himself from the table to use the Cone of
Silence, a soundproofed forcefield, he shouts: "I'M SO HAPPY, THIS IS THE
BEST DAY OF MY LIFE!!!" But it wasn't working and everybody heard him,
embarassed.
Get Smart
Max, in true secret agent style,
gets a cool gadget: a Swiss knife with a blowtorch and a crossbow. So in the
plane restroom, where he's supposed to get a parachute, one of the arrows hit
the eject button, opening a trapdoor under him where he fell through without a
parachute. Agent 99 enters, takes her chute and jumps.
The assassin following them takes
the chute Max left and goes after them.
I look forward to weekends as early
as Monday. It's what keeps me going. I care enough about my work to give them
perfect attendance but it is not my life.
Maybe I'm too much of a freespirit,
or maybe I don't really give a hoot about things I'm not passionate about.
At any rate, I can relate so much
to Aaron Ralston (James Franco), the engineer slash mountaineer in Danny
Boyle's 127 Hours. As soon as the weekend rolls in, we're both out, up and
away. Aaron even takes pictures and videos of himself; wow, that's so
Huggybear!
For me, the absolute worst thing in
the world is to be trapped, metaphorically and otherwise. In Aaron's case, he
got stuck in a mountain crack when a large rock pinned his arm.
I don't know what I'll do if that
happens to me. He was there for 5 days, which I can't even imagine.
Before that, he met two girls,
Kristi and Megan, also trekking in the Blue John Canyon, named after the cook
of Butch Cassidy. He roguishly charmed them into being their guide.
Butch Cassidy was a famous outlaw.
His life was brought to the screen in Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid. The
screenplay is written by William Goldman, whose novel, Temple of Gold, is one
of my favorite books of all time. The film features Paul Newman and Robert Redford
(whose Havana is one of my favorite movies of all time) and the timeless
Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head. (Yes, that's also one of my favorite songs
of all time)
While squiggling through a steep
crevice, Kristi (or was it Megan?) is worrying that the mountains might
suddenly move and squish them. They've been here for millions of years, says
Megan (or was it Kristi?), so why should it?
Oh, Aaron says, "Things are
moving all the time!"
127 Hours
Unexpectedly, he let go and
vanished. The girls freaked out. Soon, they found out that beneath them is a
clear blue underground lake. They all took the plunge, over and over again. It
was an exhilarating experience of a lifetime
4 comments:
"As you simplify your life, the laws of the universe will be simpler; solitude will not be solitude, poverty will not be poverty, nor weakness weakness."
~Henry David Thoreau
Photos courtesy of starpulse.com, creativedrinks.com.au, filmbg.eu, letsnottalkaboutmovies.blogspot.com
They all took the plunge, over and over again. It was an exhilarating experience of a lifetime
.
I would have done that.
.
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