William D. Waltz
Resuscitating the Devil
A friend of mine spends weekends
in a barracks with what he calls an unspectacular crew. From all over Massachusetts
they heed the call of the National Guard, and for most, the Guard is a sacred cow
that asks for little more than three weeks of summer and a weekend every month. Of
course they run the risk of being called to duty, shipping off and fighting the devil
himself over the hot sands of virtue. In exchange for this standing army, the State
pays for their business degrees and kicks in a small stipend. With a grin, my friend
talks about the kinder, gentler Guard and its diversity training: the State teaches
soldiers about individual rights; how white should respect black; black, white; man,
woman; ad nauseam. A novel idea for an assembly line of destruction, a machine whose
primary function is to strangle difference when difference is an obstacle. My friend
and his posse of Sergeant Carters stroll out of their Quonset hut of higher education
with a new understanding and a new phrase in their lexicon with which they'll demonstrate,
at least, a sensitivity to language.
It goes something like this:
You're at a pub with the gang and one of them who's had too many, spills a mug into
the lap of the sullen mechanic to his right, a regular. His mechanical buddies in
the corner come to. You step between the two and demonstrate to the mechanic your
friend's inebriation by the simple act of apologizing on his behalf. Sorry about
that. He's had a few. Mr. Goodwrench, who isn't sure if he can let it slide so easily,
bellows with bourbon breath Yeah, he's a stupid fucking drunk. Now here's a chance
to use that diversified Guard savvy. But that doesn't make him a bad person. As part
of their re-education these soldiers are taught to acknowledge and accept differences,
to withhold judgmenta noble if not ironic effort that leads to a muddy crossroads,
where, in its twilight, the American consciousness has confused discrimination with
discriminating tastes.
Paralyzed, afraid, confused,
America stands gawking at passers-by. Opinions lodged like fishbones in her throat.
The fear of error haunts us, rattling the bones of confidence. The fear of revelation
hangs over streets like a drab specter. When reluctance turns terminal, dialogue
dies, the heart beats ambivalently. It happens everywhere, at home and in the institutions.
Friends harbor secret objections like runaway thieves. Dissent is written off as
ignorance or arrogance. A Buddhist scripture reads the man who refuses to discriminate
might as well be dead. All isn't equal. There are monsters and messiahs and between
the two, vast stretches of gray that poets and scientists investigate. They are lured
by a fragrance of the flower grown at the gate between known and unknown. It's true
we spend the dog-days of our lives in the shadowy gardens, but shadow doesn't provide
meaning; it provides texture. Neither the plumber nor the poet can allow himself
to be seduced by the ambiguous, the undifferentiated, the uncommitted. Can the wise
professor despise the Pulitzer Prize winner and simultaneously appreciate her skillful
maneuverings? Can the family dog adore his family and growl over his bone? (Or is
Spot a bad dog?) Stifled opinions and shunted emotions dissolve the foundations of
dialogue and damper the pilot light of the human soul. The dialectic between the
living and life flickers, dangerously.
Our fear of the acrimonious
emotions that wash over us ceaselessly like the surf is rooted in the same malaise
as our reluctance to have, or rather, to stand by opinions. Simple fears have been
transformed into supercops by the managers of our emotional lives. The fears of revelation
and of commitment are symptoms of a society stunted by a hulking monstrosity, a hegemony,
a mass brainwashing, that points to a market-friendly homogenous state where only
the finest, approved emotions are bought and sold. Unlike violence, which in its
most popular flavor is apolitical, misery and anger are provocative and have proclivities
to revolution. Their very nature makes them a tough sale. Expressing emotion presupposes
some degree of responsibility, and in a Victim Culture where the many-mouthed god,
pop culture, spews out a sermon that holds no one accountable, responsibility is
yet another obstacle to the free expression of humanity's bitter side. Now, hate
isn't to be worshipped or coddled. It remains a taste of hell, a low grade fever,
a minor suffering, and a bellyful of the devil's draught requires many miles to walk
off. But to be drunk a lifetime is better than a month of approximation. There is
no redemption for the somnambulist.
Intelligent, sensitive, well-intentioned
people lean toward this emotion or that, choosing to approximate hate or anger rather
than to swallow the pill. Hate, like love or any emotion, by definition, is an on-going
relationship between subject and object. One cannot decide to hate someone and cease
to be involved in an ever-evolving relationship, a dialogue. Brutes and thugs wreak
havoc upon humanity, but hate doesn't motivate them in-as-much as fear and ignorance
do. If a static, calculated decision occurs, the emotion degenerates into a intellectual
stance, a position. The morning a man decides he's in love with his chosen is the
day his love beaches itself upon the shores of routine. While our foul feelings are
being ignored and discouraged, the Be-Happy slice is paraded in front of the public
incessantly. In the surface water of pop culture, in our daily lives, true feeling
has been diluted, rendered impotent, by the continuous banal trumpeting of the marketers.
Despair and hate, a grisly
pair, must be admitted to the Human Ball; they were invited long ago. One mustn't
deny their presence or their power. You must ride their runaway sleigh and feel that
bitter wind against your cheek. To deny them is to die a little, to become a music
box ballerina, an insect, a robot, a mute bee. Outlawing despair and dissent sterilizes
the human soul. In the high desert, a soldier marvels at a truck hotter in its gears
than on its hood. The professor sleeps with her dream journal open, and under a tin
roof, the mechanic curses his last wrench. The poet blows deeply into the mouth of
the devil and the devil breathes deeply into the soul of man. To live is to live
fully. There is no other way.