
God is a dizzy dame who throws her head back and laughs from her gut. Droplets of saliva sparkle in the air. No politely covered mouth for this One. She’s extravagant, repulsive, and contagious. Early in life, I came down with a bad case of God, and it permanently deformed my worldview. To stay balanced, I learned to compensate.
But now, the crystals in my inner ear randomly come untethered and reality spins like a rolodex. I no longer trust any surface or deity presenting itself as stable or defined.
“Remember that coiled rattler under the burdock?” God chuckles as she guzzles Hutterite rhubarb wine. “That was me!” She’s drunk and proud and dancing.
“I’ve never doubted that,” I say, sober and serious.
“And remember how I taught you to breathe?”
I shake my head. God takes credit where credit may not be due. But who am I to question the Source? To protest the inconsistencies, incoherence, and impossible dialectics? The Sophie’s choices and failed states?
God clicks her castanets, sways her hips, and stomps her high-heeled feet. “Yes!” she exclaims. “That’s the question. Who are you?”
The frenzied beat moves her past the limits. The sky gathers force, and hailstones strip her naked. She throws her head back again, her joy maniacal, her hair, a den of vipers, awakened and writhing.
I am unfazed. Bemused. I’ve seen it all before.
“No,” I say calmly. “The question is who are YOU?”
The scene shifts. God is Tevye, singing as if I were Golda.
“But do you love me?” His voice is gravelly. Vulnerable.
“Do I have a choice?” I ask.
“Do you have a telescope? Or microscope? Can you alter DNA? Of course, you can. But if you plant carrot seeds, do you harvest corn?”
I settle in for a long ramble of nonsensical obfuscations, but God chucks me on the chin and becomes Dr. Seuss, reading from his book Oh, the places you’ll go. “You have brains in your head, feet in your shoes. You can steer yourself any direction you choose.”
Despite my instabilities, I know this is true.
“I have no sheep, but there are eight chickens, two pigs, a tiny slice of land, and some hateful, deluded neighbors to care for. Will that suffice?”
“Yes!” Dr. Seuss says. “Oh, love what you love and then love some more. Love so much that your muscles get sore…”
“Shazam. Poof. Be gone!” I wave God away with a smile. “I’ve got work to do.” God winks and squeezes back into that slinky gown. “Me, too,” she says with a toothy grin. “See you around.”
What a gal. Gotta love Her. Thanks, Rita, as always.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes, Polly. Gotta love her. The alternatives are abysmal! Thanks for commenting.
LikeLike
Ohhhh… I very much like this side of God. Just frenetic enough to keep me on my toes.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Ah, yes. I see some serious commonalities!!
LikeLike
[…] Vertigo […]
LikeLiked by 1 person