I never thought that the process would be so tiring. As I made my
was up the stone stairs, I looked down onto the village, suspended in the void.
It was growing color with each lesson. Maybe me learning more about them made
the world more colorful?
"I think
you'll like today's lesson." Monk told me, standing in front of the main
door.
"You actually
leave the monastery?" I asked him with a grin.
"On
occasion." He bowed, motioning for the door. I nodded as I walked past. I
pushed the door open, but it did not lead into the inside. It led into a
forest.
"I think I've
been here before." I said aloud.
"You
have." Monk replied, closing the door behind him. I looked at the other
side of the nearby river. There was a small clearing, surrounded by burnt
stumps. Footsteps were dotted into the exposed topsoil.
"That's where
Bad went crazy for the first time," I turned to face him, "wasn't
it?"
"It
was." Monk nodded, sitting in the grass near the river. "Does that
lead you into why we are here?"
"Are we
talking about Anger?" I asked.
"Actually,"
he said, "no it is not."
"Really?"
I said, surprised.
He nodded, and
pointed once again to the other side of the creek. I saw something I hadn't saw
before. There were bronze bottles scattered in the remaining patches of grass.
"Oh," I
hesitated, "so we're talking about Host?"
"Correct."
"He kind of
seems like an idiot." I started. I turned to Monk. He looked out into the
forest. "But let me guess, there's some confound reason I should listen to
him because he plays a role that is larger than I expect?"
He finally turned
to me. He would be smiling if he could.
"Before we
look at what Host truly does, we must first look at his opposite; Soul."
"I haven't
seen her in a while."
"And why do
you think that is?"
"I honestly
have no idea."
"What does
she do?"
"I don't
know?"
"You do."
He sighed. "She has told you before."
"No she
hasn't?"
"Immediately
after the split; where you dissected Good and Bad into what they truly are. She
was there."
"Oh
yeah," I exclaimed, "she deals with common sense doesn't she?"
"Yes."
"So what you
mean to say is that I haven't been using a whole lot of common sense as of
late? That's why I haven't seen her?"
He shrugged.
"Okay I'm not that bad."
"It's not
that you haven't been utilizing common sense, it’s just that other emotions are
more powerful than she is."
"Like
who?"
"All of
them."
"No they
aren't."
"Yes,"
he emphasized, "they are. Any one emotion has the power to overpower Soul;
even me. But as of late, other emotions like Love, and Could have been making
the decisions for you."
"Is that a
bad thing?"
"Not all
decisions are made with reference to common sense."
"So you're
saying that I should listen to her more?"
"Honestly,"
he started, holding up his hand, "I think you are doing fairly well with
her."
"Why is she
just a ball of light?" I asked. "And what's with her voice
changing?"
"She is just
how you connect common sense; the wisest people you know are women."
"I mean
yeah," I began, "so why isn't she just my mom? Or grandmother?"
"Because
there is more than one figure that provides you with wisdom. Some of them are
men as well. It is how you perceive them in a single amalgamation; her
appearance is nothing more than an avatar that you created."
"Could that
be said about us?" I asked.
"How
so?"
"That we're
avatars too. We'll never be the avatar that we intend to be."
"So then what
are we?"
"When we hold
up the undeveloped film to the light, we don't see ourselves in the film. We aren't the film; we are the light that
shines through."
"That was
very insightful." Monk declared.
There was a
silence in the forest. The water danced off the rocks in the creek, and birds
called to each other in the distance.
"So
then," I cut in, "what role does Host play?"
"He is your
release." Monk told me. "He is your release into unconsciousness;
that's what he prefers."
"He drinks
from the bottles that drain him dry."
"No." He
stopped me.
"That's what
he told me when I met him."
"He drinks
from the bottles that drain you dry."
"So," I
hesitated, "do I stop drinking?"
"Only if you
see it fit." He replied. "To keep him under control, do not let
pleasure, and a release to the unconscious become your vice."
"But a lot of
things do that for me; not just drinking." I exclaimed. "Just sitting
on my bed and not moving gives me a release to the unconscious."
"A vice is a
flaw." He began, slightly agitated. "A critical flaw; a shortcoming.
Relaxing is fine, and healthy for you. But doing things that will become a
hindrance are not."
"So why
listen to him then?"
"He plays a
much larger role in your own courage."
"Oh well in
that case, he isn't shouting loud enough."'
Monk sat up and
sighed, looking at me.
"I'm
sorry." I mumbled.
"Many people
call alcohol 'liquid courage.' They're right to a degree."
"So when Host
takes control, I make better decisions?"
"No, you find
the courage to go through with those decisions; he certainly does not come up with
them."
"I'm not
quite sure I follow."
"If you ever
feel completely at ease making a decision that will forever change the course
of your life, you are not thinking through enough. Those decisions, whether or
not they will ultimately lead into a new life, or have the potential to do so,
so should be very uncomfortable making that decision."
"So," I
asked, still confused, "Host gives me that assurance?"
"No." He
breathed. "The others will deliberate on whether or not to do something
righteous. But they will never be the ones to push you forward. But Host will
always be willing to do so. But be wary."
"Because
he'll try to push no matter what?"
"Exactly."
I stopped, and
tried to follow his gaze out into the forest. The sky grew lighter. It was time
to go.
"We are
almost done." Monk whispered.
"Two more
deliberations?" I asked.
"Yes."
"And what
then?"
"I do not
know."
"If the goal
of all of this is to come to grips with myself, I'll know myself by then. What
happens after?"
"There will
be more." He laughed.
"What?"
"Only those
who are the shallowest, ever fully know themselves."