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      out-of-body-travel at thirteen ����������� Chris yelled to me over the phone,
            �Ughhhhh!� I hate that!� My big sister just did something totally disgusting!� ����������� �What?� ����������� I heard sneakers squeak and scuff
            linoleum, nails scrape denim, and a chair bounce on its wood back
            and thud like rubber.� Then
            Sara laughed carelessly.� After
            a hand-muffled yell, Chris apologized, �I�m sorry I left you hanging.� She shoved her big fat ASS right in my face and farted!� ����������� The phone got smothered again (by
            who?) and Sara yelled, �Liar!� ����������� �Get away from me � you big fat �
            NO!�� Another thud, and Sara
            laughed bitterly.�  ����������� �You�ll pay for this� he warned. ����������� She thought he was threatening to
            tell on her and called him, �Cry-baby.��  ����������� After a long silence he asked, �Can I
            call ya back, later, Alec?� ����������� �Sure....� ����������� Their love-hate for each other smoldered
            all the time.� Partly it was
            because she was a senior and we were only eighth graders.� It was like me fighting what my big brother
            called a �rival sibling,� meaning himself � the showoff.� When they weren�t killing each other, they
            were so close that they thought the same thoughts the way twins can.� When they were killing each other, it was terrifying
            because their hearts were really in it.� In the end, it pushed me over the edge, too. ����������� Sara�s class tortured our class at
            will.� We were labeled the
            Troubled Underachievers year.� All
            our teachers, the principal � even the guidance counselors �
            compared us to my brother�s class above Sara�s, and even their older
            brother Tom�s class beyond theirs.� We
            had fewer honors students, dimmer all-stars, and lesser geniuses.� Worse
            yet, a bunch of us in the accelerated section had �rival siblings�
            ahead of us, so we even looked like little versions of them. ����������� Once on the after-school bus, two
            ninth grade field hockey stars, Sara�s teammates, spotted me across
            the aisle.� Wendy the pretty
            blonde smiled, �Hey, are you Little Yo?� ����������� I�d never heard my belittling name
            before, but she smiled so nicely I said, �Uh huh.� ����������� �Wanna read my button, Little Yo?�� Her eyes fired gleefully as I nodded.� Then she flipped her bright orange miniskirt
            up to show a big white button with some slogan pinned on the crotch
            of her orange panties.� I was
            so shocked they exploded in laughter.� Then
            she tilted her pelvis up to face me more, asking, deadpan, �Can ya
            read it?� ����������� I nodded �Uh huh,� and she mimicked,
            ��Uh huh,�� and then they roared so deliriously that they cried for,
            like, five minutes until Wendy�s friend pushed down the skirt
            and said, �You can close your mouth now, Little Yo.� ����������� I hadn�t realized my mouth had dropped
            open.� They roared till they
            snorted. ����������� Yet I was lucky compared to Chris;
            he got teased even when I stayed over. ����������� We saw too well (not to mention sometimes smelled)
            the seniors� dirty underwear.� We didn�t draw big bubble-letter versions of
            our names; we drew cartoons of domestic violence and plans for pipe
            bombs.� We didn�t break magazine-selling records; we
            broke records for having illegal explosives.� We
            didn�t read The Three Musketeers; we read Slaughterhouse
            Five.� We suspected all
            greatness was fatally flawed. ����������� But at least we could do things that
            would�ve looked too flaky for our �rival siblings.�� Since we�d never be able to match the last
            years� studies of genetic mutations in white mice or do dissections
            of lambs, we could do borderline stuff like Transcendental Meditation,
            which was what my friend Cheryl did.� But
            she had this freedom to entertain nonwestern concepts not because
            the Science teacher respected her study of ancient ideas but because
            he didn�t respect her. ����������� Anyway, the TM thing surprised everyone
            though it started quietly.� A
            couple weeks before she�d asked Chris to be the guinea pig who would
            go into a TM state in front of the whole class but he thought I�d
            be better. ����������� So Cheryl implored with intent, womanly
            eyes and said that on the big day all I had to do was lie down on
            the lab table and relax.� She
            said she�d read four different books on it and researched its history
            and explained it as a truly empirical method of exploring inner realities.� She was no dummy.�  ����������� So the next thing I knew, I was hearing
            the class twist leftwards in all those right-handed desk-chairs to
            watch me stiffly lie down.� I
            was actually intrigued by then. ����������� Cheryl was lecturing from her notecards,
            �If western empirical methods do only objective tests, following
            �the scientific method,� only things without subjective consciousness
            will be valid.� This is the great blindness in western science.� ����������� Mr. Rissinger frowned so hard you
            could hear the �F� getting etched into his big black grade book.� �That�s an interesting point, Cheryl.... But
            it belongs in a discussion of philosophy, not science.� ����������� So she had to apologize for questioning
            the validity of western science and cut off her introduction.�  ����������� When she started talking to me, her
            voice surprised me because it sounded so smooth and mature as she
            told every muscle in me from my feet to my face to gradually release.� Flipping slowly through her note cards, she
            painted this scene for me: I was hovering above a light green valley,
            a river shaking sun across its waves, grassy banks dotted with violet
            and orange-white flowers, fragrant buds in the trees, luminous clouds
            and streaming sun.� It put me at peace, as planned.� Even my right hand began to relax.� But when she said, �You feel you can go anywhere
            you want,� her cards got stuck together. ����������� �Oooops � Uhmmmm � uh, you � ah...�� Just to fill the awkward pause, she ad-libbed,
            �Um, you can go anywhere you want.� ����������� That was the last thing I heard �
            the fake valley was gone, and my class, the table, the teacher, and
            my body were elsewhere.... I felt the doors of the body opening and
            blowing apart like curtains. ����������� I was walking a wide desert plain
            on a narrow path toward the bright red sun just over the horizon
            aglow with orange, violet, and deep blues, and there was a feeling
            that who I was there was not who I was here.� The
            alkali floor was cracked, hard and warm, but the slight wind comforted
            me along the trek and I was not alone.� On
            my right was a woman or man in a hooded robe � someone I�d never
            seen yet knew well, somehow, if I could only see.� I
            felt the face would have been so calm because the peace I felt then
            was so much deeper than I was.� It
            comforted me just to know such ways to feel could be, needing no
            words, no desires.� I was free � the sky and dust were all I wanted.� I
            began to see her face, began to see who she was, to feel how she
            felt � I would have stayed out there with her forever.... ����������� But then Mr. Rissinger prodded me,
            shouting so hard in my ear it ached, �ALEC!� SNAP
            OUT OF IT!!!� ����������� �AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!� I yelled,
            jolted up by the pain. ����������� Cheryl asked with deep concern, �Where
            did you go?� You were � out
            � for twenty minutes....� ����������� There was supposed to be a follow-up
            interview in front of the class anyway, but Cheryl looked upset.� So I told the whole class what happened � even
            Mr. Rissinger was stunned. ����������� He stammered, hypothesizing quite
            creatively, for once: �Malfunctioning neurons... must have induced
            a vivid kind of dream.... Alec was sleeping probably.� But
            it wasn�t verifiable, it wasn�t even TM.� It was not a trance,� he pounded the table
            but persuaded no one.� What
            he was really thinking, though, was that Cheryl and I didn�t have
            the discipline to do hard science like proving white mice like drinking
            sugar water more than piss.�  ����������� The bell rang and everyone scrammed
            except Mr. Rissinger whose hard frown drooped under his dark mustache. ����������� �Were you faking, Alec?� ����������� �I � I swear � it happened.� ����������� He closed in, his face one great glare.� �Would
            you swear you were telling the truth?� ����������� I stuttered, �Uh, I j-j-just did.� ����������� Supremely annoyed, he declared, �Alec,
            you must�ve dreamed the whole thing,� and stalked out. ����������� Cheryl shrugged him off, then laughed
            nervously.  ����������� �Oh.� I
            just remembered... Alec, I don�t wanna embarrass you or anything,
            but everyone saw, so I oughtta tell ya....� You
            � you were � standing out a lot.� ����������� Her eyes fell away, suddenly coy. ����������� I was mystified, so she blurted, �Uh,
            I mean, for a while you got an erection....� ����������� �Whaddaya mean � everyone?� ����������� �I think that�s why Rissinger believed
            you.� ����������� �Oh no!� And whaddaya mean � for a while?� ����������� She gently prodded me toward the door,
            �Twenty minutes, maybe?...� ����������� �Oh no!� ����������� She smirked, �You were �outstanding,��
            she grinned and burst out laughing, �I didn�t know you had such a
            big talent!� ����������� On a slightly more sympathetic note,
            Chris saw how badly I was shaken up � the bounds of my universe had
            been ripped apart.� As we were
            walking between classes in the crushing hallway herds, I said, �I
            feel like I can�t pretend to be innocent about ultimate things anymore....� I
            feel like I�ve been drafted.� Ya
            know what I mean?� ����������� �Hmmm.� I know what you mean.� I felt that way after I saw my uncle Howie�s
            ghost.� Nobody got it � how
            hard that was to be the only one.� ����������� �Yeah, I don�t feel lucky or privileged.� I
            feel like I�m being called to something, but the service to come
            isn�t going to be an easy.� Plus, being out there, I could see how petty
            my ordinary self really was, ya know?� ����������� �I know just what you mean....�� Chris said, and then he cracked up, �Uhm �
            I mean, not that I think you�re petty or anything....� ����������� There was only one other fluke exposure
            to another eastern meditative tradition in 8th grade.� We instantly loved the energy of this one-day
            sub from California who was the stereotype Surfer � tall, blond,
            strong and tanned.� He had
            no plan but to go outside, sit us in a circle in the sun, pass around
            a �secret word,� the mantra Namihyo renge kyo, and start us
            chanting.� He gave us so much
            respect he actually valued our time as if we were guests.� He didn�t preach how the syllables would resonate
            down our selves� essences and every things� around.� He just led us in the chant until our voices
            flooding the field entranced us, helping us forget where we were
            and that we�d have to go back to the same old crap.� The
            sky unfurled intensely blue, the hot sun seemed to strike us into
            one celebrating choir.� It
            was stunning to really feel something in school since who-knows-when!� My voice hit harmonics in others� vocal cords
            and others struck harmonics tingling spontaneously inside my throat.� We soared so free the class flashed by, some
            girls even cried they felt so elated � my peers were suddenly people,
            not just kids I had to cope with all year.� It
            seemed like summer again but with a deep joy buzzing in the air. ����������� Then the bell rang � something like
            Algebra was about to happen in three minutes.� Worse
            yet, we knew he wasn�t coming back. ����������� Afterwards, for days I felt it was
            such a war not to lose all creativity.� Chris
            realized more than anyone else how school kills.� He was the only friend I had whose mind could
            be blown wide open by the way sunlight whitens the grass in the wind,
            the way elms sound when it rains, the way the muddy creek flows with
            green debris after a storm.� The
            smell of grass and weeds that turned sickly sweet in spring and the
            light of clouds that vibrates till it stings � these were pure poetry
            to him stronger than any drug could be for insight into reality.� (On
            the other hand, our wonderful families drove us to drugs later anyway....)� We would�ve shriveled up without these ecstatic
            feelings.� Chris, who wrote
            poems since he was ten, was also the only friend I had who thought
            my hand was a kind of a gift because it made me more thoughtful. ����������� Once we were sitting in the lawn in
            front of the school and while pulling up some grass he told me, �Did
            you know that these grasses are immature?� I
            mean, they get cut down before they can reach maturity and seed.� ����������� �Uh huh,� I said, not getting his
            drift. ����������� �Look, don�t you get it?�� He stared into my eyes, �What they do to the
            grass every time they mow it is just like what they do to us.�� I could tell he was sad. ����������� �You mean, because they want to create
            order, they can�t let things just grow?� ����������� �Yeah.� They even talk about us like weeds � like we�re
            the bad ones.� They even called
            kindergarten kindergarten.� ����������� �Yeah, I never thought of that.� ����������� �Yeah, and it pisses me off that they
            think these words are cute.� Because
            what�s just a word to them is torture to us.� ����������� �Because we have to live with what�s
            just an idea to them.� ����������� He nodded, �Did you ever see grass
            that grew wild � like three to five feet tall?� Did
            you know grass has a whole life-cycle it actually will go through
            if you don�t cut it back prematurely.�� We
            were both thinking really hard as he said, �But for some reason American
            people keep doing this lawn thing....� ����������� �It�s permanent youth, to them.� That�s what they like about it.� It never grows old the way it would in nature.� ����������� �Yeah, and like grass, they keep us
            all around the same height, despite the individuality bullshit they
            spoonfeed us.� ����������� It was obvious that it wasn�t going
            to be easy for us to be who we were.� Though
            he was among the most gifted of athletes and thinkers in the school,
            he always felt intelligence was a burden.� It was painful especially because low hopes
            hemmed us in on all sides. ����������� So it was inevitable that one day
            Sara would push him over the edge.� I
            was at their house one Saturday nobody was getting along.� We were trying to get organized for this ride
            with Chris� brother Tom who was old enough to drive.� In the living room, Sara was sarcastic and
            condescending.� She usually
            didn�t bother me, but this time when she overheard us talking about
            God, the soul, and reincarnation, she said, �Jesus Christ Almighty.... Listen
            to you two � The Saint and the Sinner.�� She
            laughed at her own joke. ����������� �Who asked you?� And who�re you calling the Sinner?� Chris fumed. ����������� �Oh.� Well.� How
            about the Genius and the Goddess....� she sneered. ����������� I could�ve felt offended, but it didn�t
            mean anything to me.� But Chris�s
            temperature rose �� his face
            reddened.� I was about to say something, but he snapped,
            �Stay out of this, Alec.� ����������� He looked at me and I saw anger in
            his eyes like a hard, bright, blue light.� I
            reminded him we�d planned to go somewhere anyway, and Tom who was
            finally ready shouted from his room, �Chris!� You
            gonna just talk all day or are you going to do something?� ����������� �Well we�ve been waiting for
            you long enough!� he shouted back. ����������� So we went outside and climbed into
            the van. ����������� �God, it pisses me off when she talks
            that way!� Especially to you.� I never act that way to her friends!� ����������� �I don�t care what she says.� ����������� To our surprise, Sara climbed in front
            next to Tom who was driving.� This
            upset Chris even more because she hadn�t wanted to go before. ����������� �And where do you think you�re going?�
            Chris demanded. ����������� Putting the little van in gear, Tom
            said, �I�m gonna drop her off at her friend�s.� ����������� Chris stared coldly at the back of
            Sara�s head, commanding, �But you�re gonna take us to the tennis
            courts, first.� ����������� �Take me first.� I asked first,� Sara reminded him, and when
            Tom nodded, she stuck her tongue out at Chris.� Then
            she added, �Besides, I don�t wanna be seen in the same vehicle with them.� ����������� �Oh, well � kiss my royal ass,�
            Chris said. ����������� �You�re such a pervert you�d
            love it.� ����������� Tom shouted, �Shut up, the both of
            you!� Or nobody goes anywhere.�� Tom took his foot off the gas and the van drifted
            a little too far left. ����������� Frustrated, Chris implored, �Alec.� Can you believe this?� ����������� �Y�hear that, you two?�� Tom shouted again, peering at us in the rear-view
            mirror. ����������� �Whaddaya mean � us?�� Chris was angry we�d somehow been blamed. ����������� Tom pulled over.� Now he was mad too, and he shouted about
            how he�d meant Chris and Sara, not Chris and me, and if anybody
            started a fight they�d get kicked out � especially us.� Then just for aggravation he called us �wusses.�� Chris took all this in with arms locked across
            his chest to stop the coming explosion.� A
            mile later, Sara called us �homos� just for spite. ����������� �At least I�m not a lesbian!�
            Chris shouted. ����������� �Faggots!� ����������� That did it � Chris lurched forward
            from his seat with his fist clenched, and she turned around laughing
            and challenging him, �C�mon...I can still take ya.� ����������� Before he connected with a punch,
            I grabbed his arm at the instant he was winding up, and pulled him
            back.� I caught him unawares � his muscles were hard
            as rock and he was so angry it made him too stiff to slip my grip.� I hated restraining him because he only got
            madder.� But I couldn�t let
            him pulverize her.� I was able
            to just barely hold him back because he didn�t want to fight me too.� I
            knew he felt terrible � I did too.� She
            made it worse by slapping him, and when she hit him, he surged
            like a tidal wave.� And just
            to be mean she called him a �pussy.�� I
            thought my arms were going to fall off. ����������� In a little while we got kicked out
            at the tennis courts and as Tom and Sara drove off Chris was still
            yelling at them.� He was mad
            at me too, �Goddamn it!� Why
            did you do that to me?� How could you do that to me?� ����������� I was so sorry I couldn�t say anything. ����������� He grabbed one of the little elm trees
            by the asphalt court in the grass and started tearing down a thick
            branch.� I was stunned � because
            he loved trees, and also because the branch was over two inches thick.� Groaning and grunting, he snapped the branch
            after bending it to earth repeatedly.� I
            wanted to stop him, but he wasn�t listening.� He
            shouted with an agony that made him even madder.� Even hurting the tree wasn�t helping. ����������� My body felt like lead poured into
            a statue.� It was so awful
            to see him this way, and to have added to his pain was unbearable.� The pain was so overwhelming that I snapped
            � like a branch � and was released.�  ����������� If a tree had a soul that flew away
            when its boughs were broken, it would have felt what I felt then.� The sky absorbed me like a breath exhaled.� Beyond
            the cars, blacktop, cinderblocks, glass and careless passersby, a
            peace held me like a cloud sustaining an ice crystal in its mist.� I
            felt like a sapling that suddenly remembers its ancestor forest,
            its millions of green lives in each tree, each rooting into other
            lives, and each racing rival life-forms: parasites grinding pulp
            leaves to worms� food, warm and cold-blooded voices, mammals moved
            by rage, hunger, lust, fear.� My spirit understood each thing but was free
            from the struggle to endlessly be.� The
            spirit that every body holds was one with me � for a while I was
            as free from �self� as I was from my body.�  ����������� I saw my self with all its flaws before
            it could slam shut its gates of mind again � I saw what I was and
            what Chris was.� He was so
            absorbed in rage he couldn�t see me.� And
            I felt for him and even for me � fifty yards away and twenty below
            down there. ����������� Then in the awful moment when hate
            gushed out of his heart toward my empty body, he realized he was
            looking at the shell of me.� Suddenly
            he knew better and stopped.� He
            was so sorry as he came back to his senses. ����������� I had to choose to be thrown in the
            mess of life again, or I could stay in that higher peace.� I wasn�t being prodded and yelled at like in
            Science class.� And in that
            instant when the self shut its doors again, my body dragged me in
            its heavy wave, but the bodiless feeling still filled me like a sail.� Chris
            was apologizing over and over.� I
            felt tired, bewildered, and small.� But
            because I was back in my kid self again, I was happy to see his face. ����������������������������������������������������������� |