c. 2026 Rod Ice
All rights reserved
(3-26)
“No sympathy for the devil; keep that in mind. Buy the ticket, take the ride... and if it occasionally gets a little heavier than what you had in mind, well... maybe chalk it up to forced consciousness expansion: Tune in, freak out, get beaten.”
Over the course of my life, I have developed certain theories about human existence. Conclusions of a sort gathered from an extended, informal study of this mortal condition. Made generally without applying strict rules of observation, and archiving data. Instead, this pursuit has happened while simply being present in the moment. Eyes open, heart beating, and mind yearning to gain knowledge.
What I have seen, first-hand, is what I know.
Relating the yield of this adventure might be challenging if it were delivered in a public setting, with real-time scrutiny, and analysis. Yet for this writer, my work is presented here, in a forum generally ignored by all. As stated in the masthead, ‘Nobody Reads This Page.’ Therefore, I speak freely and without inhibitions. No mood of introspection causes me to be shy, and reluctant. I do not hesitate when admitting an odd truism, which now, seems to be a bedrock foundation upon which my personality rests:
That moments of quiet agony, when I stumbled, failed, and suffered were painful for me, but good for my art. A conundrum that rules everything I have done, and will do, until the end of days is nigh.
I never pondered this epiphany much as a younger fellow. When the desire to write and be read was very strong. I wished to follow in the footsteps of my genetic and intellectual sire, someone who was a published author, scholar, and theologian. His example drove me to seek achievement. I wanted to make him proud, in the sense that I had inherited some measure of his wordsmithing artistry, and command of general understanding. But my manuscripts were always flaccid, and mushy. They had no snap of a genuine substance. No boldness, no edge. I could turn a phrase, occasionally. Perhaps even wittily muse over subjects of various sorts. Yet these experiments lacked the sharp precipice of a rocky cliff. From which ideas might dangle and dare to fly, or fall.
I craved that urgency. An insistent force of need to inspire the creative process. Despite this lacking, I had two fictional stories published in a California, cult gazette known as Biker Lifestyle Magazine. That reward gave me the courage to continue. But I needed to grow beyond the status of a seedling, into something more complete.
After attempting to live on my own in the Finger Lakes Region of New York, where I miserably proved to be too weak for the challenges of adulthood, a return home to Ohio offered salvation. It was then that I received a most important nugget of wisdom, from my mentor. With obvious empathy, and some frustration, he watched as I hammered out lines of text with an old, manual, Royal typewriter, sat on our coffee table in the living room. That space was where I slept as well, because there were no more beds available in the household, when I arrived on foot.
He delivered a sage admonition that literally upset my inner balance, in a good way:
“Write from your own experiences. You know them better than anything else.”
At first, this piece of wisdom appeared to be somewhat insignificant. Perhaps even obvious, to the point of philosophical irrelevance. But as I began the task of creating a third document for the outlaw publication which had embraced my product, the true value of this advice hit home. Still reeling emotionally from an exit-in-rags, after leaving the Empire State, I infused some of my own rugged memories into the storyline. What resulted was a flash of authenticity. A spark of genuine enlightenment. The cherished gift that my benefactor had predicted.
I called my motorcycling tale, ‘Once More A Drifter.’
Many years later, after career loss, divorces, bankruptcy, and family exile, I realized that by extension, the guidance I received in yonder days now included another stanza. Not only was there genuine worth in drawing upon personal events, for inspiration, but a strange twist on this truth had also come into effect. The revelation that while my errors in judgment might have precipitated woeful results, they bolstered the art which I considered to be of paramount importance.
Hard times equaled better work in my home office.
I was stunned by this fact, at first. Because, as most people do by choice, I had sought the comfort of success. I wanted to gain accolades and awards for myself. Rightful recognition. Fame in a sense of being known. Renown among my peers. Or at least, those whom I perceived to be peers, in the craft of writing. But only by crawling through the mud, through hardships and depravation, through loneliness and obscurity, had I gotten anything right. To be denied was my call to cation. It kept me focused and forceful. Able to concentrate on goals that mattered. Without that motivation, my mind would become lazy. My skills would diminish.
The crazed, creative essence to which I had been distilled would be no more.
When I confessed this belief to Yarrow Rogan, a close friend from my previous life, he was puzzled and perplexed. Even over our wireless connection, via a cellular phone, I could sense his reluctance to accept what I had declared. His voice groaned out a petition for reassessment.
“C’mon dude, you’re saying that effing things up gave ya a better life? What the hell, that makes no sense! I never got anything out of making a mess. All it did was kick me in the ass! I think maybe you’ve had too much to drink!”
I was sober, not only so far as being free from alcohol, but also in terms of thinking clearly.
“No, listen, this is an incredible shift for me. I used to want a better life. More friends, a higher income, a pleasant living space, all the trappings of success. A collection of records and books, and guitars. But here I sit, with many of those trophies in my case, and they mean nothing. What shaped my outlook wasn’t stockpiling assets, but feeling the gnawing cold of a night on the concrete. The harsh tongue of a critic, pointing out my own inability to stay smart. The hungry pangs in my belly, after going days and weeks without a solid meal. Those were my teachers. From them, I learned how to be better, to do better, and thrive...”
My excitement did not resonate so well during our brief conversation. Yet after the chat ended, I realized that Hunter S. Thompson had long ago provided a similar wrinkle on this subject, before anyone else.
“Buy the ticket, take the ride.”
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