Mountains should be climbed with as little effort as possible and without desire. The reality of your own nature should determine the speed. If you become restless, speed up. If you become winded, slow down. You climb the mountain in an equilibrium between restlessness and exhaustion. Then, when you are no longer thinking ahead, each footstep isn’t just a means to an end but a unique event in itself. This leaf has jagged edges. This rock looks loose. From this place the snow is less visible, even though closer. These are things you should notice anyway. To live only for some future goal is shallow. It’s the sides of the mountain that sustain life, not the top. Here’s where things grow.
–Robert M. Pirsig, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance (1974)
Finished my last round of radiation yesterday morning. I had been exhausted the day and night before, the steroids having little affect after Monday’s dose. I felt a bit better yesterday as we road down the highway towards the hospital, perhaps brightened a bit by the thought that a critical phase of my treatment was near to an end.
During the drive, we both were silent for most of the drive, more so than usual. Along the way, my gaze moved to the silhouette of the hills to my right. I do this every time we go the hospital. These hills run east and west parallel to the New York/ Pennsylvania state line, at the south edge of the valley through which the Chemung River travels on its way to feed the Susquehanna, not far from the hospital.
As I always do, I focus on the high ridge of the hill that rises steeply above my childhood home. The PA line is just over the top it. I know that hill pretty well. Well, whether I really do anymore is a point of contention as memory fades.
Even so, I still think of it as mine.
It lives on in my mind in a Proustian manner. Each time I ride by it, the mere sight of it causes lashes of childhood experience to pass through my mind. The days spent alone wandering on it. It had a feel and a mood that often mirrored my own. Or perhaps it was the reverse– that I was its mirror.
I don’t know. It felt like we knew each other then. Now it simply stands there for me like an old friend, a silent repository of a little boy’s thoughts and imagination from many years ago.
Seeing it again reminds me of how children have an innate ability to live in the present, much like attitude Robert Pirsig advocates for us older folks in the passage at the top. The future, with few exceptions such as Christmas, seems like a distant land, out of sight and out of mind. The past is still close at hand but is quickly washed aside by the overwhelming raging river of all that is new and in front of them.
There was only the now for me then on that hillside.
Of course, that changed at some point, as it does for us all. The past accumulates and takes on a larger presence, one that often taps us on the shoulder and holds our attention for far too long. The future is now loudly beckoning us, loudly calling and waving its arms in a way that distracts us from where we are or what is in front of us.
When we are on that hillside now, we are now too often dwelling on how we got there or where we are headed. The past and the future have tight holds on us.
We no longer notice the feel or smell of the slippery soil on the upgrade. The coolness of the blue light shadows cast by the trees or the welcoming lower limbs of a massive hemlock that asks you to climb up on them and imagine things and people in a different time and place.
It’s funny that the past serves up such a dish whenever I see that hillside. You wouldn’t think the past would try to remind you to live in the now, would you? But it knows that you once knew that feeling of only being in the now, as a kid trudging quietly alone on that hillside.
I sometimes find little bits and pieces of that childhood feeling while walking in the forest around my studio. The hill is not as steep and the trees are not as old growth as those behind my childhood home, but it still provides moments where the past and future fade to nothingness. It gives me once more childlike joy in the now, much like that I experienced on that hillside I pass in silence on my way to the hospital.
It’s good to have an old friend like that, one who reminds you of your better self. To remind you that life is on that hillside, not where you’ve been or where you’re going. Where you are at this very moment.
Had no idea what I was going to say this morning. Glad I took the plunge here. It felt good to write this. This is not meant to be a Look Back post but the painting at the top is pertinent here. It is a very early painting that is my impression of an area just a few miles down that same line of hills where they slightly veer into Bradford County, Pennsylvania. I didn’t have that in mind when I painted this early watercolor back in 1994, but it immediately became the only way I saw it then and now. I called this painting Bradford County.
For a piece of music, I am sharing a song from Grammy Award-winning guitarist Bill Mize. I was honored when he chose a painting of mine for his album Southwind a few years back. This is Lonesome Valley. It felt right for this post even though when I was on that hillside those many years back, I might have been alone but was never lonely.
I had my hill…










