September 7, 2014

The Man Who Carried the Dark Lantern

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The man that wandereth out of the way of understanding shall remain in the congregation of the dead. -- Proverbs 21:16

Watching one of their ancient demons return to take control of someone you love, and begin to kill them slowly with euphoria is a hard witness to bear alone. They'll all tell you you have no power to stop it, but that cannot be true.

Surely somewhere in the mountainous library of studies written about the Demon there's a magic spell, an incantation, a potion, a pill, a recipe for rescue. You find yourself, as you always have, turning to books where, most certainly you've told yourself, all answers lie. But this particular library is, you will find when you go there, vast, unmapped and illuminated in the manner of Milton's Hell,
     A dungeon horrible, on all sides round,
     As one great furnace, flamed; yet from those flames
     No light, but rather darkness visible
,
and the card catalogue has long since been ripped from the drawers and scattered madly about the floor by others seeking the same secret. Still, I stumbled about blind in this dark place which held no braille, nor could I have read it if it had.

Like untold millions of others before me, I became disoriented deep in the towering labyrinth of stacks obsessively organized in perfect manic randomness. At some point I reached out and plucked a book at random from this chaos, but since I held no light it could not be read, and I probably would not have understood its language could I have seen the text.

Useless, I dropped it as so many others before me had dropped their randomly grabbed books. It didn't matter, in the end, how many books were dropped or thrown onto the heaps, there were always more being written and tossed in from all sides. Each, in the dark, as useless as the centuries of books that had come before.

In a short time, I became utterly lost. Then I could neither find what I had gone into the library for, nor could I find my way out. In my frantic quest to save what could not be saved, I had gone deep into the far corridors far beyond any faint glimmer and lost the way back.

I felt the fear that cavers feel when, in a tight space far below the surface, their helmet lights fade and die and the weight of absolute darkness presses hard all around their bodies. What I needed then was not The Book with The Secret -- somewhere in those endless shelves it may well exist -- but a guide to get me out. And for a reason I do not yet comprehend, but hope to, a guide was sent.

He was one of the rough, hard working men of America and he held a dark lantern --
an ancient device in which the light within is either concealed or revealed by means of a sliding panel. He did not know me at all, but he did know himself as he walked out of the night in a small town up by the Canadian border. He didn't know my story but he did know his story and that, at rock bottom, it was not that different at all from mine.

His dark lantern didn't light up the place where I was lost in some shattering burst of illumination, but instead -- by sliding the panel back and directing what little light he held towards the exit, we were in time to find ourselves outside the black library and sitting in that most common of American spaces, a small town coffee shop where I could, at last, see what he looked like.

The waitresses all knew him. It seems he's been guiding people out of the dark for some time in this town, and the ladies understand what he's doing when he shows up with yet another shattered pilgrim like myself. They put us in a booth at the back, refilled our mugs for free, then went away and let us talk far past closing time.

He was a carpenter by training and by trade. About my age but without any of the soft edges that I've either always had or more recently acquired. His hands were scarred and had the flattened nails and tips the fingers get from too many encounters with boards, hammers and the other daily hazards of the job.

You could see that his face, when angry, would have been sharp, vulpine and cold, but he no longer had any anger in him. That had been burned out long ago or stored in a vault over which he kept a careful, constant guard.

His hair and mustache had faded into almost complete gray and his skin and body had the look that decades of working outside in all weathers gives you. He was a man's man and a good man. But, as he was about to tell me, that had not always been so.

First he sat and listened long to my sad little pathetic story as he had I'm sure listened to hundreds of others. I won't bother with the details of that story now, but save it for a time when it no longer seems so ordinary and boring to me as, at the end of this week of telling it over and over, it does now.

Instead, from the hours of talk that followed, I'll try to give you a sense of his story and the path that led him to the small town coffee shop deep into that April night. Listening to him tell it was like watching him work his dark lantern. A panel would slide aside and the light would come out for a bit and then it would slide slightly back dimming the details. I only heard it once and I didn't get it all. As a writer I should have made notes, but I wasn't a writer in that night, just someone grateful to have been guided out of a labyrinth. What I remember now is...

He'd always had a hardscrabble existence from a childhood that, if it wasn't in the logging town we were in, was in some other place where logging was scattered all around and the railroad trains never stopped moving over the rails in the center of town. His family all had the Demon inside them because that was, in the end, what they had if they didn't have God. Sometimes they had the Demon right alongside God in the primeval co-existence that's furnished the human soul since the beginning. They lost no time in making sure, by hook or by crook, that he got his own personal Demon as a present from his town and his family along about the time he entered puberty.

Because everyone around him had and liked their Demon, there was no reason for him not to like it. Indeed, his Demon, it seemed at the time, was a lot of fun and the fun just got better as he got older.

True, he saw other members of his family and his friends in the small town go down under the Demon. Their lives went to the standard stops on the road -- fist fights, knife fights, job loss, crime, rehab, jail, prison or, at any time and age you might care to imagine, death by natural or unnatural causes. Lots of friends and family members went down over the years, but he was, he told me, always a bit tougher, smarter, cagier, sharper, quicker, more charming, and more ruthless. He was "the special personal exception" and he rode the Demon. It was never going to be the other way around. Until, of course, it was.

It rode him long before he knew it. It always does. By the time he knew that it had reversed roles and taken the saddle, he'd become used to being ridden and so he galloped on ever deeper into the darkness.

By that time it had been 20 years of life with the Demon and all its assorted friends. One Demon is never, it seems, enough if others are around. When they were, it was no longer just the Demon and him, but a party in his body.

Other bodies came in and out of the party over the years. Some he used and some used him, but it was always a using. They used him for fights and for other things of even lower degree. He got so it was not a question of how low he would go, but if he could find a way to go lower.

He moved the slide aside on the dark lantern:

"I don't remember everything because I either can't or it was so horrible God has, with His grace, removed the memory from me. I do remember some things. I remember lying on a filthy bed somewhere in Mexico. I had a bottle of Cuervo empty on the table next to it and another one full and ready to go. I had my pistol on the floor. There were a lot of lines of coke still waiting to be snorted. There was an old whore working me on one side while my other arm cradled my infant daughter. I'd wedged a chair under the knob of the locked door so I wouldn't be interrupted. I hated interruptions."
He moved the slide back and closed the dark lantern.

He told me other things, the full catastrophe. About how he lost it all -- house, job, money, business, health, love, freedom. About how his family either left or took on a Demon or two from him. He told me about some jail time. He indicated but did not tell me about worse things.

He told me about the women he'd been with, about the Demons they carried and the dark places they'd been ridden. Down, always down, under the relentless riding and the unremitting tug of the heavy gravity that the deep realms of degredation always emit. He told me how he'd learned to spot the ones that wanted to be used the most, and that he'd take them up on it, and be sure to take them deeper than they thought they could go. The slide on the dark lantern moved often as he talked.

"It's easy to go to these dark places around here," he said. "When winter sets in there's nothing else to do. But I've also found it's just as easy to go there in Chicago, so what do I know?"

He was a strong man and his Demon used every bit of it until to pull others into Its thrall, until at last it used him up. As It often does, the Demon took him at the end of the ride down towards an ugly death, the kind that happens in clapped-out broken trailers, or cheap hotel rooms with a bare light bulb. Not exactly where he found himself, but close enough. At which point, he was -- for no good reason that he could ever think of -- saved and slowly returned to life.

"Some one backed the Demon off me when I'd proved to everyone and myself that what I really needed to do was die," he said. "I didn't know then Who'd done it and it didn't come quickly or easily and I turned back dozens of times. But one day, I guess when I prayed to God to just kill me, He didn't. Instead, He led me back.

"I'm not going to tell you how because I'm not here to sell you a Bible. I'm just going to tell you that He did and as close as I can figure it, the reason for His Grace is so that I can, in this town, every so often come and talk to a man like you that has the Demon, or has someone he loves that has the Demon.

"Sometimes it seems to help and sometimes it doesn't and sometimes I never know. What I do know is that while I'm far from free of It, when I come home from work sore and aching, I get in my hot tub with the Bible and some ice tea and I keep reading through it. It took me two years to get through the Old Testament and I'm glad and happy to be starting on the New. In between, I wait for the phone to ring and when it does, I go out and listen and talk to the person calling no matter how tired I am, no matter what time is it, no matter how long it takes."

He seemed then to close the slide on his dark lantern and set it aside.

"My life's still not really right. Not really right at all. Given what I've done it probably never will be right. The family is still fighting the Demon just like me. Trouble still comes when you expect it least.

"I'm still upside down with money. I was down so deep I'll probably check out before getting it straight. I go to meetings when I go and I take my church seriously. But I still don't know what purpose I have. So I just do this because it seems to be what is given me to do. I can't do much in the way of spiritual work like the preacher can. I'm just a carpenter. But I can do this."

We parted then and he walked out into the dark early morning. The waitress, who had waited long past closing, locked up with some relief. "I don't mind staying at all when he comes in," she said. "Sometimes people just have to talk to other people."

I went upstairs and slept for a few hours, waking at dawn and walked through the tiny small town three blocks to the Catholic Church where I'd learned there was a meeting, not for me but for those that had the Demon. He was there, looking tired but ready to go to work for the day. Others, rough men and women all, were there too bringing with them what they had to bring, taking away what they chose to take, and leaving, if they could, some of the Demon behind.

When it was over he said, "Come to breakfast with us."

And so it was I found myself riding along in a carpenter's pick-up over the sand and snow scoured roads of the town to a local hash joint of ancient vintage by the side of the road. By the time that was over, I'd managed to meet many more good people in this town in one morning than I've met in the two years in Laguna Beach where I know hardly a soul.

On the way back to my hotel, we stopped off at a job a young man was doing for him. Tearing down an old ramshackle garage to put up a new for an elderly couple who needed it done. As far as I could tell it was being done for free because it could be. He spent a few minutes talking to the kid and advising, but not telling him, how to do it.

Then we drove back to my hotel and shook hands and said goodbye. He turned left at the corner and was gone.

I went back to my hotel room to pack for the drive to the airport. My phone rang. It was the person I had come to see calling to ostensibly thank me for the dinner and the talk from the night before, but also to be sure I was indeed leaving and would not be appearing suddenly at a function that night. It wouldn't do for a part of their old life to suddenly appear in the middle of this "clean break," this "fresh start" at living with the new-old Demon. As we talked I began to understand that I would now always be speaking with two whenever I spoke to this person and would be required to remember that as hard as it might be.

In truth, it was clever to ask. I had thought of doing just that the night before. Checking out of one hotel and checking in to another just to spring up and see what else was being hidden, concealed and kept secret from me as it had been for such a long time. Instead I began to accept that whatever I could imagine was either true or was going to be. I was tired of the game even though I knew I was not done with it, and there was -- if I looked at it coldly -- really nothing left to keep me where I didn't want to go in the first place. So I just gave assurances that I had a long drive and had to be going. Things became warmer after that and we said goodbye. I drove out of town and, at last, towards my home.

I'm back home now and am, as is the sad state of our times, finding myself sitting in rooms filled with bromides, slogans, cliches, isms, and the other people broken by the people who let the Demon ride them. Just another one of the remaindered souls set out on the bargain shelves.

I'm already loathing my story and shocked and frightened by some stories I hear that are, so far, much worse than mine. I've never been a man who spoke the truth without first being asked, nor have I been one who could listen, but I'm trying to learn that when you don't listen the only interesting story in the room is yours. And you're sick of it first.

They say that all of life is a series of lessons that will be repeated until you learn them. At which point you will be given a new lesson. I don't think I asked for this particular lesson, but I'll take a shot at learning it since that's the lesson that has arrived.

I've talked to the man with the dark lantern on the phone a couple of times since the night he took me out of the black library. He's still wondering what his purpose can be and working on getting through the New Testament. I'm not a religious man and I'm no expert on the Bible, but I think I know an apostle when I meet one.

Me? I've no idea what I'm going to do and even less about what my purpose can possibly be. God knows I've chosen wrongly up until this point every time. So for now I'm just writing down what happens to me as clearly as I am given it. It's my way, I imagine, of learning how to make my own dark lantern.



Originally published April 28, 2005

Posted by Vanderleun at September 7, 2014 2:30 AM
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"It is impossible to speak in such a way that you cannot be misunderstood." -- Karl Popper N.B.: Comments are moderated and may not appear immediately. Comments that exceed the obscenity or stupidity limits will be either edited or expunged.

Whoa ... sounds like a battle Gerard. Fortify yourself. Stay healthy as you can. Pry a portion of your every day away from the rest of the world and give it to yourself. Maybe an hour or two walking on the beach. You can't turn your back amigo, not even on your own self. May you find many and strong allies.

Posted by: Steel Turman at April 28, 2005 5:05 PM

Gerard,

Thank you for sharing from your soul. I know where you've been; God knows where you're going. My prayers are with you, my friend. And remember, you cannot fight the battle alone.

Posted by: Dr Bob at April 28, 2005 5:29 PM

My prayers are with you too. The Mafia has nothing on God, as I well know. He has come to you in a less than classic way, but far more real than the stories.

I choose to go to bring back those who don't believe anymore or never believed. I have no clue what your call is, maybe to just be you. Your carpenter has reset your life's course. Pray and let it flow. You had half or more of the answer before you met him, that I know from your poetry and writing. Dr Bob said you cannot fight the battle alone, from this post on, you will not be alone. Just be silent and you will know.

There are many of us with you--Steel Turman, Dr Bob, and I are merely the ones to tell you.

Posted by: Bill at April 28, 2005 7:14 PM

I'm not quite sure what you're talking about (or what your Demon is without guessing) except that I have been where there is no light and found some light to get out of there.

It sounds hideously ludicrous to assert, I was saved by the light, or I saw the light -- but the funnier thing is, that's exactly what you see in one form or another. Once you've been to the bottom and seen a true way out, you can never fall as deep again. You have inextinquishable hope.

Posted by: mark at April 28, 2005 7:46 PM

I think Bill's right: just be you. You say you've chosen wrongly all along, but that's often hard to gauge. I hope you won't give up trying for a more trusting relationship with this loved one. You may still be able to offer help to move their life in a better direction.

Posted by: danae at April 29, 2005 2:09 AM

thanks for sharing . thank God you had this moment of lucidity.

Posted by: gord westergard at April 29, 2005 2:58 AM

You mentioned it in your post, but throughout I was reminded of Dante finding himself in the dark wood of error, then having Virgil sent to him as a guide.
Best wishes on your journey.

Posted by: Chrees at April 29, 2005 8:51 AM

gvl,

i am not a carpenter but i am pretty good at listening, and i have some entertaining stories about laguna beach, and am just up the laguna canyon road, so if you ever want to hang out or chat, drop me a line. good luck and god speed.

Posted by: cjm at April 29, 2005 8:57 AM

Thank you, Gerard. Your own dark lantern has shed some light on the path for the rest of us.

Posted by: Tom Spence at April 29, 2005 10:15 AM

Our primary purpose is to stay sober and help others recover sobriety.

For the layman: The purpose of life is to love God and to demonstrate that love by helping your fellow man.

Posted by: Paolo at April 29, 2005 10:35 AM

Rather than tell you "Buck up, old boy" or anything like that, I would like merely to add a story.

From "Three Men in a Boat" by Jerome K. Jerome, which is mostly a funny book, but this is different:


Once upon a time, through a strange country, there rode some goodly knights, and their path lay by a deep wood, where tangled briers grew very thick and strong, and tore the flesh of them that lost their way therein. And the leaves of the trees that grew in the wood were very dark and thick, so that no ray of light came through the branches to lighten the gloom and sadness.

And, as they passed by that dark wood, one knight of those that rode, missing his comrades, wandered far away, and returned to them no more; and they, sorely grieving, rode on without him, mourning him as one dead.

Now, when they had reached the fair castle towards which they had been journeying, they stayed there many days, and made merry; and one night, as they sat in cheerful ease around the logs that burned in the great hall, and drank a loving measure, there came the comrade they had lost, and greeted them. His clothes were ragged, like a beggar's, and many sad wounds were on his sweet flesh, but upon his face there shone a great radiance of deep joy.

And they questioned him, asking him what had befallen him; and he told them how in the dark wood he had lost his way, and had wandered many days and nights, till, torn and bleeding, he had lain him down to die.

Then, when he was nigh unto death, lo! through the savage gloom there came to him a stately maiden, and took him by the hand and led him on through devious paths, unknown to any man, until upon the darkness of the wood there dawned a light such as the light of day was unto but as a little lamp unto the sun; and, in that wondrous light, out wayworn knight saw as in a dream a vision, and so glorious, so fair the vision seemed, that of his bleeding wounds he thought no more, but stood as one entranced, whose joy is deep as is the sea, whereof no man can tell the depth.

And the vision faded, and the knight, kneeling upon the ground, thanked the good saint who into that sad wood had strayed his steps, so he had seen the vision that laid there hid.

And the name of the dark forest was Sorrow; but of the vision that the good knight saw therein we may not speak nor tell.

Posted by: growler at April 29, 2005 12:20 PM

The Grace of God, all the coffee I can drink and once a year they buy us a cake. I never had it so good!

Posted by: Dennis at April 29, 2005 8:32 PM

it's good
to have friends.

not that it's easy.

best-
-bt

Posted by: bt at April 30, 2005 8:05 PM

on another note,
and not to be glib:

in the past,i've heard this description of paranoia,
and it really gets right down to the issue:

"paranoia is thinking
one is the center of the universe."

it just ain't so.

hence the comment above about friends.


my best to you gerard-
-bt

Posted by: bt at April 30, 2005 9:03 PM

The light is hope and the hope is God.
Never did I think the word God would leave my lips without being a lie.
What has happened to me? Why did I never see truth? I had to be broken to be whole.
When Jesus was being with his friends after his death he breathed the holy spirit into them. What a great picture, the breath of God coming into anothers lips.
Whenever your lost remember, just look up and God will be there.
I love these comments from Bill, Dennis and Dr.Bob
Thanks so much for that phone call it truly breathed new life into me.
Your doing great Gerard and I love your writing.
You have some wonderful friends on line.
Take care.
A grateful man

Posted by: EJ at May 3, 2005 10:45 PM

Gerard,

While you’ve been “away”, I took this opportunity to read several of your past essays. This is one that stopped me cold in my tracks. Yes, Gerard. “Life sucks then you die”....or you find a light or just a flicker... then stand up and move on…one…. step…. at…. a…. time, and maybe, just maybe carry a bit of that light with you. Other than that vision, nothing really changes. Like you, and I would believe countless others, I've had to face a few demons of my own and those of some very close to me. Does it really ever end? One of those demons lived in a bottle. In my escape I fashioned a persona in my mind, and named this seductress of the soul Bitch.

Bitch In The Bottle

Welcome,
to the world
of she who must be
obeyed...

A day alone,
unbearable,
my need for
soothing warmth,
unrequited.

Enter,
near blind,
into her universe
of deceit and lies,
dulling,
shaking-desires.

There posed
upon a stool,
skirt hiked high
above snow-white thighs,
revealing endless charms...

A deep cleave,
enticing soured eyes
to the heaving
breasts within...

Raven hair
drapes her goddess form,
promising delights,
unimaginable.

Aroused by my thirst
she quenches
anticipation
into a collision of
fire over ice.

Entranced
by her promise
of unbridled lust
I drink of her
essence, unending.

Sipping her warmth
yields pleasures of freedom
from this world of
harsh realities.

Accept a promise,
so welcomed,
an invitation
of anticipated cravings.

Passion's the way
to become one
tonight.
Pay the demons'
due in the morning.

A climax long reached
exploding within her.
Expended in this
web of spinning
fantasies.

Weary, soaking wet,
drained of all essence,
I roll into the heat...
of my own vomit.

I hate you bitch...
until tomorrow.

RR 2006

Posted by: RunningRoach at June 4, 2006 3:50 PM

While you’ve been “away”, I took this opportunity to read several of your past essays. This is one that stopped me cold in my tracks. Yes, Gerard. “Life sucks then you die”....or you find a light or just a flicker... then stand up and move on…one…. step…. at…. a…. time, and maybe, just maybe carry a bit of that light with you. Other than that vision, nothing really changes. Like you, and I would believe countless others, I've had to face a few demons of my own and those of some very close to me. Does it really ever end? One of those demons lived in a bottle. In my escape I fashioned a persona of the bottle, and named this seductress of the soul Bitch.

Bitch In The Bottle

Welcome,
to the world
of she who must be
obeyed...

A day alone,
unbearable,
my need for
soothing warmth,
unrequited.

Enter,
near blind,
into her universe
of deceit and lies,
dulling,
shaking-desires.

There posed
upon a stool,
skirt hiked high
above snow-white thighs,
revealing endless charms...

A deep cleave,
enticing soured eyes
to the heaving
breasts within...

Raven hair
drapes her goddess form,
promising delights,
unimaginable.

Aroused by my thirst
she quenches
anticipation
into a collision of
fire over ice.

Entranced
by her promise
of unbridled lust
I drink of her
essence, unending.

Sipping her warmth
yields pleasures of freedom
from this world of
harsh realities.

Accept a promise,
so welcomed,
an invitation
of anticipated cravings.

Passion's the way
to become one
tonight.
Pay the demons'
due in the morning.

A climax long reached
exploding within her.
Expended in this
web of spinning
fantasies.

Weary, soaking wet,
drained of all essence,
I roll into the heat...
of my own vomit.

I hate you bitch...
until tomorrow.

RR 2006

Posted by: RunningRoach at June 4, 2006 3:52 PM

I'm somewhat amazed that you don't feel the grace pouring down as you write, because that's what it is, and there's not a thing you can do about it.

Posted by: Gagdad Bob at December 22, 2007 12:26 PM

The woman I love has the Demon, but I didn't see it in action until a couple of weeks ago. Afterwards, I spent some time in that Dark Library, trying to figure out what to DO, 'cause men like me are supposed to do something when someone's in trouble. Last week I went with her and made my first visit to the room with the bromides and cliches and hoary old stories of how far down you can go. I think one of the reasons the meetings help is that it reminds them that they're not the only ones with a Demon.

What you've written here reminded me that I'm not the only one who's smelt the brimstone on a friend's clothes, or done some library time. Thanks, man.

PS: Bob's right about the grace, too.

Posted by: Noid at December 24, 2007 12:12 AM

From that Grace-full 'bleak midwinter' --
"What can I give Him, poor as I am? ... Yet what I can I give Him, give my heart."

'For it is in the giving that we receive.'

Posted by: FamouslyUnknown at December 24, 2007 7:39 PM

I am with you in these places. I've visited this land and I always find clues, scraps of paper, words from strangers that seem to be from angels. This piece you wrote for me. Thank you for this heavenly Christmas Eve

Posted by: dian at December 24, 2007 8:27 PM

Hope that two years later, you're very far away from the black hole. You're still in my prayers. And will be forever.

Posted by: Obi's Sister at April 26, 2008 2:12 PM

I've been down the Dark Road myself, and was similarly rescued. I'm glad you were, too.

I need to make friends with my rosary again.

May God bless you.

Posted by: B-chan at April 26, 2008 8:46 PM

While I was in Scotland at a wonderful family wedding, a teenager in my extended family here at home (the son of one of my step-brothers) shot and killed himself. He just couldn't kick his drug and alcohol problems. The pain of it and what could have been are ineffably sad in the midst of such joy elsewhere.

Hope two years later, you're at a better place with this. God grant us the serenity to change the things we can, accept the things we can't and the wisdom to know the difference. I am a great believer that prayer is often the only thing we can do.

Posted by: Webutante at April 27, 2008 11:14 AM

Let me try this one more time:

God grant me the serenity
to accept the things I cannot change;
courage to change the things I can;
and wisdom to know the difference.

Living one day at a time;
Enjoying one moment at a time;
Accepting hardships as the pathway to peace;
Taking, as He did, this sinful world
as it is, not as I would have it;
Trusting that He will make all things right
if I surrender to His Will;
That I may be reasonably happy in this life
and supremely happy with Him
Forever in the next.
Amen.

--Reinhold Niebuhr

Posted by: Webutante at April 27, 2008 11:38 AM

"Christ is risen from the dead,
trampling down death by death,
and to those in the tombs bestowing life."

Posted by: RiverC at April 28, 2008 8:10 AM

Brings to mind the song Pour Me a Pint.

Posted by: Ron at September 7, 2014 7:47 AM

"He was a strong man and his Demon used every bit of it until to pull others into Its thrall, until at last it used him up."

Its funny how taking the wrong road leaves you hollow.

www . youtube . com/watch?v=yOpsJ8dh5L4#t=58s

Perspective is important: Eyes to see, ears to hear. Those who are lost don't know how to use either, need to be helped in seeing things with different eyes. Experiences cannot be changed, but what can be changed is how you feel about them.

Eden is here, we never left: We just lost the grace to be able to see it.

Nice story, Gerard.

Posted by: cond0011 at September 7, 2014 6:53 PM

I am clean and sober for twenty-seven years now. Best thing I ever did for myself.
Heck, they gave me a medal for saving my own life.

Thanks for the insight.

Posted by: chasmatic at September 8, 2014 4:40 AM