SATURDAY

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rod & Sunny: Photo by Bob Gentry 8/5/1999

A Thought for Today

Each of us should be alone at times, if only to confront ourselves.

 

SOMETH'NG for SATURDAY

Forward - from the book "Alone"

What follows in this book is a collection of poetry and prose that touches on a number of subjects; they have, however, the umbrella - I might have said electric blanket - of being written of and about the state of alone.

Attempting to define alone is futile, the symptoms and the end result are always different. It is enough to say that if you believe yourself to be alone, you are. Seemingly, there is almost no way to set about with any success to circumvent or avoid its coming - even as you see it approaching in the distance. But most often alone can be reasoned with and it passes. Someone comes by and makes it pass. If not, take it as a partner. We’ve all known worse.

Alone is not the end - or it shouldn’t be. In truth, it is a starting place. One more square. One for reaching out.

I am not a joiner. Somewhere I once said that people join clubs now for the very reason they once carried them, a need for security. Maybe I’m alone more often than I should be, because I try to find security within myself.

Though I believe very strongly in social intercourse, mentally and other wise, the man who detailed the advantages of masturbation as not having to dress up, being certain not to disappoint anyone, done on your own time and at your appointed place, and, best of all, meeting a better class of people, did have a point of view hardly arguable.

Alone, like love, regardless of what the primers say, can be a noun, pronoun, adverb, or adjective - depending on its use and the extent to which it comes, stays, or returns to your life. Darkness and retreat have more than once been my cover. By now I’ve traveled deep enough into the darkness that hiking back through any clearing is a journey not taken without some thought.

With growing frequency I now plan nightly outings in the morning, awaiting them through the day, and with approaching
darkness work myself into an apathy that a closing battle line could not penetrate. I am never sure what I miss by staying home. Doubtlessly, I’ve avoided disappointments that might have chipped away a little more of my self-confidence. Possibly on one given night I missed the silver apple that, bitten into, would have changed my life.

I chose the shadows, they did not choose me. I stay here securely not just because I feel plain, but because disappearance is by now the easy way. The habit. The worn path that I can trod knowingly and be assured safe passage home.

Don’t ask me how it might have been, or what it could or should have been like. How different all my days would be if I’d
strode securely into public sunlight. More and more I take the sun alone - always at the edge of the clearing, close enough to the wood to crouch low or retreat at ease should the beautiful enemy pass by.

I have never said I liked always being alone. I have said I like it better than being with just anybody. The need to merely touch
someone I’ve seen, or imagined, can be so great at times that it’s as close to madness as I ever hope to come.

The brushing of two minds, or hands, or bodies together. Even eyes focused at distance can make the loneliest of us all alive and full of hope - momentary or otherwise. And I have known two minds and bodies seemingly compatible in every way to meet in love and be so alone together you would swear they’d never met. We do meet each other over and over every day. But centuries can seemingly go by before two people meet in some special way that causes an end to their individual loneliness.

Much of this book is new. Since I go on being the same man trying to find the answers to some of the same questions, some of these poems will be newer to me than they are to you. Other poems were written years ago, but never shown or shared, and some are taken from other collections. If I have to describe them, personal and private come to mind. But those words, too, have been for me nouns, pronouns, verbs - far more than adjectives.

If these pages are so personal and private, why let them go ? Why not ? There is a chance, however small, that some one will read, understand, even stop and turn in my direction.

To repeat myself, sometimes someone passes by and stops; then you’re not alone. Some of these words are smoke signals.

Rod McKuen - 1975

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Rod's random thoughts Never fear being alone, because you never are.

If you are alone, plan ahead to next Sunday.

We come into the world alone and go away the same. We're meant to spend the interval in closeness, but it's a long while between the morning and the evening.

THOSE WHO FOUND THE TIME

My vision
of a lilac world
is held in trust for me
by friends
    who’ll never know
                 they’re friends.
And lovers I’ve held
               only once.

I’d let them know, but how ?
I’d fit them in, but when ?
Still no one’s needs
     are that of being
                    fitted in.

Every man demands
his full round
share of time.

But on those few
who’ve found the time
          to fit me in,
schedule me somehow
within their crowded lives.
They are remembered
        almost daily.
                        At night
each of them returns
every bit as real
as lilac smells
       on April days.

 - from "Alone", 1975

 
© 1970, 1975, 1986, 2002 by Stanyan Music Group & Rod McKuen. All Rights Reserved
Birthday research by Wade Alexander o Poetry from the collection of Jay Hagan o Coordinated by Melinda Smith o Sound & Fury Dr. Eric Yeager o Webmaster Ken Blackie
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