» Mon Nov 08, 2010 4:20 pm
Strength
I wish I were a stronger man.
I wish I were strong enough to hope.
I wish that man could rebuild so that whenever it is you are reading this there is once again hope in the world.
In my travels and really just because of the times in which I have lived I, like all the others, have had to make one real primary decision which would affect how I would live the rest of my life. I do not know if I have made the right one...I don't think I could have made the other.
The decision is the simple old question of "Is the cup half full or half empty." Doesn't get much more Philosophy 101 than that, but in a world like this it can make all the difference. I erred on the side of empty. That might strike you as sad. I know it would have struck me that way before the war, but that was before I saw what hope can do to a man.
Have you ever heard of Los Angeles? No? Well in it's time Los Angeles was a massive hub of humanity. Looked up to by the creative and criminal types of the United States and looked down on by the rest of society. Los Angeles was a mixing pot, much like New York, of all the different cultures that made up the United States in the days before the cataclysm. Unlike New York, Los Angeles had resisted the arrests and purges of the McCarthy trials.
It was burned from the face of the Earth in the first moments of that cataclysm. In a city so big however there were still plenty of burned out husks standing in the streets. This city was the stuff of nightmares. Blackened torn buildings reached toward the sky amidst the rubble of those that had fallen. Innumerable bodies littered the streets. Clad in suits, jeans, hats, dresses, gowns, overalls, and some with their clothes burned off or stolen. Beheaded, bisected, broken, burned, shattered, shot, stabbed, and starved. The bodies displayed for all the world to see. This was where hope and the disappointments that it must bring took their toll on those who survived the bombs.
The city actually looked bigger in those days than it had in the time before. With many of the buildings destroyed or in tatters you could see further down the streets and were given a wider panorama. It was a panorama straight out of Dante's Inferno. I ventured into it nonetheless. I was fortunate that I had taken it as a given that my family was dead, I some small hope of finding them at first...but if I were to really think about it I knew them to be dead. The first few days in this city would drain me of whatever inkling of hope I might have held on to. I was in such a state from the beginning as to not truly feel the impact of the city. I mean I was struck by the scene no doubt. It is easy to look at such a scene from a distance and feel disconnected, but up close and looking at a small charred corpse in the back of a minivan or finding the more recently dead...it is much more personal. I didn't care much if mankind were gone, but I did care when I found the individual bodies.
I learned to switch that off quite quick, and really perhaps that switch is more important than the "Half empty or half full" question...though really that all ties into hope.
I've rambled quite enough.
Suffice to say then that entering into this city every traveler must make a decision. Turn that switch, empty your glass half way and note that it is empty, abandon all hope...or take on the sorrow, the heart ache, the thing which man has no real word for, that results from such an event. I didn't want to face that. To look into every face, skull, and pile of ash and feel the loss of possibility of unknown futures. If I were stronger perhaps I would have made the other decision, but if I had perhaps I would have ended up as so many of those who first ventured into the heart of Los Angeles did.