I didnât go to church as a kid, but I remember a friend once telling me about something he had heard at church that Sunday. âThey said that a satellite took a picture from really far away of what they think might actually be heaven.â
Iâm terrified of judgment when it comes to my spirituality or my ideas about God. Iâve had so much animosity built up around religion for so long that I get really nervous and defensive about it. (See: “Evil” / “Maybe I Don’t Believe in God”).
But I pray. Or â rather â I try to pray. Sometimes. Iâm not praying to someone that can be photographed from outer space though. For me, prayer is an exercise thatâs its own reward. When I pray, itâs never for myself. I only pray for other people because â in doing so â I think about them. (“Portraits of God, Nothing, and Fear”).
Most days, I isolate and tell myself that my activities through my website (and online generally) are enough sociality. Living in my little bubble of self, itâs really easy to get wrapped up in my own nonsense, problems, or [whatever]. Prayer is one way of forcing myself to remember other people in a way that affects me more than a âlikeâ on a Facebook post. It feels good to break out of myself now and then. And it’ll usually motivate me to reach out and connect with a friend in a way that feels a little more meaningful than I might otherwise.
My first reaction to twelve-step programs was: âRequired belief in a higher power? This isn’t going to work for me.â I read âWe Agnosticsâ and heard about the proverbial higher powers of atheists (light bulbs, door knobs, etc.) and it was all bullshit. Besides, from what I could tell, these programs werenât talking about âa higher power of your own understanding,â they were talking about GOD. Narcotics Anonymous goes so far as to refer to God as âHimâ (with a capital fucking H)! The Alcoholics Anonymous text is even worse; with exclamations like âMay you find Him now!â they might as well have a crucifix on the cover. I was equally unimpressed and unswayed by the guy who told me his higher power was Spiderman. And the people who said that NA or AA was their higher power just seemed to be reaching.
It wasn’t for me. âWe Agnostics?â More like you agnostics. I wasn’t an agnostic or an atheist because I’m not even acknowledging it. Â If someone asked me if I believed in God, Iâd look at them like they were retarded. “Itâs not something that concerns me. Itâs not a relevant question. Who fucking cares?â
In December of 2011, worn by desperation, my mind opened just a little bit. In my room alone, my second night in (my first) rehab, I accepted my first higher power. It was something. Literally. My first higher power was something. âWhatever it is that those addicts who recover share in common â thatâs my higher power.â My thought was that I may not be able to identify or articulate exactly what that was specifically, but that only made the concept seem more in line with what I thought conceptions of God or a higher power are really all about.
As I became more well-versed in recovery speak, I would playfully throw the slogans and principles around â mock-chastising staff and peers when theyâd do or say something that could be interpreted as out of step with recovery. This, of course, included statements invoking God. As it so often happens in rehabs (or kindergarten classes â or any place populated by those with the emotional maturity of children) someone made a joke that sparked a whole series of related jokes, perpetually retold, refined, and expanded. In this case, the joke was Samâs punk god. I loved it and, somewhere along the way, actually adopted it. Accepting a higher power in spite of my awareness that it was the product of our imaginations â in a way â showed willingness. It required more than ordinary faith; it required total nonsense. And while completely irrational, it was still (as Iâd love to point out) every bit as valid a conception of God as the ones presented in religious texts. Its absurdity was part of the appeal. âPunk God isnât really concerned with sin,â Iâd preach. âExcept for voting. Punk God fucking hates voting. If you vote, you’re definitely going to hell.â In more earnest moments, Iâd confess: âI don’t actually believe in Punk God, but as a concept â as a tool â sure.â Eventually, Iâd need something that could offer me more guidance than a parodical exaggeration of myself. But for a time, the idea that Punk God was looking out for me was enough.
Something in me changed. I was building up to it over the course of more than a year but there was a moment when it really crystallized and I became a different person. [See: âNo Accidentâ]. Iâm still somewhat embarrassed to talk about it isometimes, but I got to a place (emotionally) where I could accept a real higher power.
Love.
Iâm not perfect when it comes to practice but, in a tough situation, sometimes I have the peace of mind to pause and ask myself: Whatâs the loving thing to do? What action can I take in this moment to demonstrate love for myself as well as love for others? If I answer it honestly â and have the discipline and willingness to honor the answer in that moment â life seems to⊠everything seems to work out pretty okay (better than okay: extremely well).
This might not always be the case though, were it not for the second of my (let’s call them) “spiritual principles.” When something bad happens, I donât accept that itâs bad. It might seem bad, but it isnât. I might feel some kind of pain in response to it (whether physical, emotional, or [whatever]) but itâs a good thing. When I struggle with something, thatâs a good thing. Itâs an opportunity for growth. Itâs a chance to become a better, stronger person. I believe that everything happens exactly itâs supposed to or, alternately, everything happens for the best. This is not a belief that I get consequent to some other belief (for example, that thereâs a god up above thatâs playing chess with all of our lives). This is a choice. I choose to believe that this is true. And â on a very basic philosophical level â it is very much, absolutely true â so long as I want it to be. Reality is reality. I canât change it. What I can change is my perspective / attitude.
Itâd be easy to conclude that terrible things happen on this planet and that we live in an awful world. Even in examining my own situation, I could conclude that I live in my ex-girlfriendâs parentsâ house because Iâm fresh out rehab; I went to Georgetown Law and I donât even have a job; I sit in a dark garage all day and generate my only income by selling weird antique dolls on eBay; Iâm 27 years old, spent most of the last 16 months in rehabs and mental health institutions, and canât even get a bank account; the record label that I poured myself into for years has crumbled and my band doesnât even really exist; Iâm a fuck-up, a loser, and I have no prospects for the future.
Instead, I choose to see it more along the lines of⊠I was a trainwreck of a human being and behaved abominably; in spite of that, I have people in my life who not only trust me to live in their home, but allow me to do so rent-free; I got to take more than a year out of my life to study myself with the help of incredibly gifted counselors, therapists, and doctors and finally figure out why Iâve spent most of my life unhappy, and discover a new kind of happiness that I never knew existed; I also discovered visual art, something that I was once too fearful to even attempt seriously, but that I now enjoy as thoroughly as anything else in this world (even pop punk!) and that has allowed me to connect with other people (people still struggling with addiction, people in recovery, and just regular people) in a way that those people tell me has enriched their lives and, in turn, enriches my own; I have dreams and aspirations that I work toward everyday and I enjoy that work regardless of any external success that might or might never come from it; I have beautiful friendships with inspiring people whom I admire and a girlfriend with whom I am thoroughly in love; life could not possibly be better.
Only one of those two statements is true but I get to choose which one it is. This is where the old, abandoned concept of Punk God comes in â itâs all about choice. No one can prove me wrong. Things may look one way â it doesnât matter. Everything is exactly as we believe that it is. Right and wrong donât really exist. Not in any practical sense anyway. I choose to believe that everything works out for the best for the same reason I chose to âbelieveâ in Punk God. Because it helps me. It makes life easier. And just as no one could prove that Punk God wasnât real, I canât prove that everything doesnât work out for the best. So I believe that it does. And Iâm right!
—–
Prints of this piece are now for sale in my webstore.
The phrase trying to be a light came to me. I repeated it like a mantra (in my head) as I tried to hold on to my grip. I was sad that my plans hadn’t worked out and I was really anxious about the message I had just gotten from Heather.
An older woman and her daughter (still older than me) walked up and asked about my painting and about art school. Â “No, I’m not an art student.” I told her I was fresh out of a seven month stint in rehab and that that’s where I had picked up art. We talked for a few minutes and then she asked if she could pray for me.
And I said yes.
I’m tempted to defend myself. “Why wouldn’t I say yes? What do I care if she prays for me? It can’t hurt me.” But – in that moment – I think I was actually wrecked enough that my actual rationale was closer to: “Shit. Yes. Please.” (That episode where Homer’s in trouble and he screams something like, “Help me! Jesus! Allah! Buddah! I love you all!” – that’s kind of the state I was in). In either case, I’m positive that my outward response was simply a shrug and a nonchalant (possibly dismissive) “sure.”
But what I didn’t realize was that she didn’t mean later, at home. She wanted to pray for me right there and then. Aloud. With me, at the table, outside of this grocery store, as people milled in and out around us.
I was uncomfortable. Really uncomfortable. But I didn’t want to be. So I fought the impulse to stop her and just let it happen. She might have even tried to take my hand and I might have even let her. (I think I did). And then she went inside to buy groceries.
When she came out, she said bye and wished me luck. Just as I was finishing this. So I gave it to her. I don’t know why.
(I know why. Or… I have theories as to why. Good and bad. I don’t really like either. So I’ll just leave it there).
The third painting of ten in my series, “The Weak End,” created in the last few days of my seven months living in Tranquil Shoresâ inpatient facility.
The text in this piece (though barely legible) says, âIâve basically stopped praying. I do (maybe) three real meetings each week. I donât EVER think of you. And âyouâ isnât even you.â
By early February, I wasn’t technically inpatient anymore. Though I lived on property and was subject to a lot of the same rules as before, I had some special privileges. For example, I was still required to go to at least five meetings a week, but I no longer had to go with everyone else. If I could transport myself, I could go to whatever meetings I wanted, so long as I signed in and out, came back on time, had it approved by my counselor, etc.
On the night that I painted this, I left for a meeting. It was only my sixth one on my own. And I ran out of gas on the way there. For the third time. There were no gas stations in that area, but I was still really close to Tranquil Shores. I was too embarrassed to go back and admit that I had fucked up again though, and in such a basic/stupid way. I decided to hide out in a parking lot until the time when I was scheduled to return from the meeting. But then I got anxious and snuck back onto property early so I could go back to painting. Later, I pretended that I had just forgotten to sign back in.
I didnât write a statement on this piece back in February and I donât think I journaled that night either. I wish I had because I donât even know who the âyouâ that I “wasnât thinking about” is. If I had to guess, it was a girl, but it could have been any one of three girls that I would have been having thoughts like this about at the time.
—–
This was my favorite song that week. I was listening to it at least five or ten times a day.