Yeah, Put Out That Fire In Your Head-With Patti Griffin’s
Song Of The Same Name In Mind
By Fritz Taylor
Sam Lowell was a queer duck, an odd-ball kind of guy who
couldn’t stop keeping his head from exploding with about seventeen ideas at
once and the determination to do all seventeen come hell or high water. And not
seventeen things like mowing the lawn or taking out the rubbish but what he
called “projects” which in Sam’s case meant political projects and writings and
other things along that line. Yeah, couldn’t put out “the fire in his head” the
way he told it to his long-time companion, Laura Perkins, one night at supper after
she had confronted him, and not for the first time, that he was getting more
irritable, was more often short with her of late, had seemed distant, had seemed
to be drifting into some bad place, a place where he was not at peace with
himself. That not “at peace” with himself an expression that Laura had coined that
night to express the way that she saw his current demeanor. That would be the
expression he would use in his group therapy group to describe his condition
when they met later that week. Would almost shout out the words in despair when
the moderator-psychologist asked him pointedly whether he felt at peace with himself
at that moment and he pointed responded immediately that he was not. Maybe it
was at that point, more probably though that night when Laura confronted him with
his own mirror-self that told Sam his was one troubled man.
Yea, it was that seventeen things in order and full steam
ahead that got him in trouble on more than on occasion. The need to do so the
real villain of the piece. See Sam had just turned seventy and so he should
have been trying to slow down, slow down enough to not try to keep doing those
seventeen things like he had when he was twenty or thirty but no he was not
organically capable of doing so , at least until the other shoe dropped.
Dropped hard.
It was that “other shoe” dropping that made him take stock
of his situation, although it had been too little too late. One afternoon a few
days after that stormy group therapy session he laid down on his bed to just
think through what was driving him to distraction, driving that fury inside him
that would not let him be, as he tried to put on the fire in his head. That laying
down itself might have been its own breakthrough since he had expected, had fiercely
desired to finish up an article that he was writing on behalf a peace walk that
was to take place shortly up in Maine, a walk that was dedicated to stopping
the wars, mostly of the military-type but also of environmental degradation
against Mother Nature.
Sam, not normally introspective about his past, about the events
growing up that had formed him, events that had as he had told Laura on more
than one occasion almost destroyed him. So that was where he started, started to
try to find out why he could not relax, had to be “doing and making” as Laura
called it under happier circumstances, had to be fueling that fire in his head.
Realized that afternoon that as kid in order to survive he had learned at a
very young age that in order to placate (and avoid) his overweening mother he
had to keep his own counsel, had to go deep inside his head to find solace from
the storms around his house. For years he had thought the driving force was
because he was a middle child and thus had to fend for himself while his parents
(and grandparents) doted respectively his younger and older brothers. But no it
had been deeper than that, had been driven by feelings of inadequacy before his
mother’s onslaught against his fragile head.
As Sam traced how at three score and ten he could point to
various incidents that had driven him on, had almost made him organically incapable
of having a no ever active brain, of going off to some dark places where the
devils would not let him relax, that kept him going around and around he realized
that he was not able to relax on his own, would need something greater than himself
if he was to unwind. Laura had emphatically told him that he would have to take
that journey on his own, would have to settle himself down if he was to gain
any peace in his whole damn world. Sam suddenly noticed after Laura had
expressed her opinion that she had always been the picture of calm, had been
his rock when he was in his furies. Funny he had always underestimated, always undervalued
that calmness, that solid rock. He, in frustration, at his own situation asked Laura
how she had maintained the calm that seemed to follow her around her world.
Laura, after stating that she too had her inner demons, had
to struggle with the same kind of demons that Sam had faced as a child and that
she still had difficulties maintaining an inner calm, told Sam that her daily
Buddha-like meditations had carried her to a better place. Sam was shocked at
her answer. He had always known that Laura was drawn to the spiritual trends around
their milieu, the “New Age stuff” he called her interest since it seemed that she
had taken tidbits from every new way to salvation outside of formal religion
(although she had had bouts with that as well discarding her Methodist high
heavens Jehovah you are on your own in this wicked old world upbringing for the
communal comfort of the Universalist-Unitarian brethren). He had respected her
various attempts to survive in the world the best way she could but those roads
were not for him, smacked too much of some new religion, some new road that he could
not travel on. But he was also desperate to be at peace, a mantra that he was
increasing using to describe his plight.
Then Laura suggested that they attend a de-stress program that
was being held at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston as part of what was
billed as HUB-week, a week of medical, therapeutic, technological and social events
and programs started by a number of well-known institutions in the Boston area
like MGH, Harvard, MIT and others. Sam admitted to being clueless about what a
de-stress program would be about and had never heard of a Doctor Benson who a
million years before had written a best-selling book about the knot the West
had put itself in trying to get ahead and offered mediation as a way out of the
impasse. Sam was skeptical but agreed to go.
At the event which lasted about two hours various forms of
meditative practice were offered including music and laughter yoga. Sam in his
passed on those efforts. The one segment that drew his attention, the first segment
headed by this Doctor Benson had been centered on a simple technique to reduce stress,
to relax in fact was called the relax response. Best of all the Doctor had invited
each member of the audience to sample his wares. Pick a word or short phrase to
focus on, close your eyes, put your hands on your lap and consecrate, really
try to concentrate, on that picked term for five minutes (the optimum is closer
to ten plus minutes in an actual situation).
Sam admitted candidly to Laura that while attempting fitfully
focusing on one thing, in his case the phrase “at peace,” he had suffered many
distractions but that he was very interested in pursuing the practice since he had
actually felt that he was getting somewhere before time was called. Laura
laughed at Sam’s response, so Sam-like expecting to master in five minutes a
technique that she had spent years trying to pursue and had not been anywhere
near totally focused yet. He asked her to help him to get started and they did
until Sam felt he could do the procedure on his own.
We now have to get back to that “other shoe” dropping though.
Although Sam had expressed his good intentions, had felt better after a while
Laura had felt that he needed to go on his journey without her. She too now
felt that she had to seek what she was looking for alone in this wicked world despite
how long they had been together. So Laura called it quits, moved out of the house
that she and Sam had lived in for years. Sam is alone on his journey now, committed
to trying to find some peace inside despite his heartbreak over the loss of
Laura. Every once in a while though in a non-meditative moment he curses that
fire in his head. Yeah, he wished he could have put out that fire in his head long
ago.
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