The other day an acquaintance of
mine, a gregarious and charming man, told me he had found himself unexpectedly
alone in New York for an hour or two between appointments. He went to the
Whitney and spent the “empty” time looking at things in solitary bliss. For him
it proved to be a shock nearly as great as falling in love to discover that he
could enjoy himself so much alone. What had he been afraid of, I
asked myself? That, suddenly alone, he would discover that he bored himself, or
that there was, quite simply, no self there to meet? But having taken the
plunge, he is now on the brink of adventure; he is about to be launched into
his own inner space to the astronaut. His every perception will come to him with
a new freshness and, for a time, seem startlingly original. For anyone who can
see things for himself with a naked eye becomes, for a moment or two, something
of a genius. With another human being present vision becomes double vision,
inevitably. We are busy wondering, what does my companion see or think of this,
and what do I think of it? The original impact gets lost, or diffused. “Music I heard with you was more
than music.” Exactly. And therefore music itself can only be heard alone.
Solitude is the salt of personhood. It brings out the authentic flavor of every
experience. “Alone one is never lonely: the
spirit adventures, Walking/In a quiet garden, in a cool house, abiding single
there.” Loneliness is most acutely felt
with other people, for with others, even with a lover sometimes, we suffer from
our differences of taste, temperament, mood. Human intercourse often demands
that we soften the edge of perception, or withdraw at the very instant of
personal truth for fear of hurting, or of being inappropriately present, which
is to say naked, in a social situation. Alone we can afford to be wholly
whatever we are, and to feel whatever we feel absolutely. That is a great
luxury! For me the most interesting thing
about a solitary life, and mine has been that for the last twenty years, is
that it becomes increasingly rewarding. When I can wake up and watch the sun
rise over the ocean, as I do most days, and know that I have an entire day
ahead, uninterrupted, in which to write a few pages, take a walk with my dog,
lie down in the afternoon for a long think (why does one think better in a
horizontal position?), read and listen to music, I am flooded with happiness. I’m lonely only when I am
overtired, when I have worked too long without a break, when from the time
being I feel empty and need filling up. And I am lonely sometimes when I come
back home after a lecture trip, when I have seen a lot of people and talked a
lot, and am full to the brim with experience that needs to be sorted out. Then for a little while the house
feels huge and empty, and I wonder where my self is hiding. It has to be
recaptured slowly by watering the plants and perhaps, by looking again at each
one as though it were a person. |
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