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Archives

Entries in Omega Man (9)

Wednesday
Dec312014

Last Year......

Last Year……

I

Drove across the country and back

Touched others
Was Touched by others

Spent my whole winter skiing in Colorado

Strove to be more generous and giving

Played and played and played in the snow

Spent time with loved ones in California I haven’t seen in many years

Did some of the best writing of my life

Visited my sister in Phoenix

Spent my summer
At magical places
Omega
Kripalu
Cape Cod

Met some of the most amazing people of my life

Flew on the trapeze

Went deep into my own heart and soul

Asked myself some tough questions
Some of which I’m still answering

Reconnected with the love of my life
That was not to be

Finished the first draft of my book

Moved into a new beautiful space

Joined a new band

Made a Christmas CD

Created
Created
Created

Fucked up a lot
Learned a lot

Had some of my highest highs
Had some of my lowest lows

Tried to be the best man I could be
Wasn’t always
Keep trying

Searched
Found…..
Kept searching

Dreamt some dreams I’ve never dreamt
Felt some things I’ve never felt
Saw some things I’ve never seen
Did some things I’ve never done

Stayed fit and healthy

Pushed my own envelope
And understand I need to keep pushing it even more

Know I have lots of work to do
And always will

Let the world see more of my heart
More of me

Took lots of risks

Know My Best Is Yet To Come



                          -Clint Piatelli
                            December 31, 2014

Tuesday
Sep232014

Larry's Rhythm Wallet

I wrote this at a writing workshop at Omega this summer. The exercise was to tell a story, about a wallet, using nothing but dialogue. It was quite challenging for me, because I had never written dialogue before. The format is that of a screenplay, where the character's name appears over his or her dialogue, which isn't in quotations.

 

                       BANG

Hey man, can I borrow your wallet?
                    
                        LARRY
Excuse me?

                        BANG
Can I borrow your wallet? You can take everything out if it. I just want to borrow the wallet itself.

                        LARRY
What for?

                        BANG
Well I’m recording a rhythm pattern over there on my laptop, and I need to hit something else to create another tone. When I hit the wooden table with my drum sticks, it gives me the chick sound. Hitting the wallet will give me the boom sound. Ya know, “Boom/Chick, Boom/Boom/Chick".......

                       LARRY

Yes, I get it. But that’s…….ridiculous. I’m not lending you my wallet to record drum sounds.

                        BANG
C’mon man. I’m really onto something here. I’ll even give you a writing credit when the song gets made.

                        LARRY
Yeah. That’s a real incentive.

                        BANG
I’m serious, bro. What’s your name?

                        LARRY
Is this some sort of a scam? Because this sounds like some sort of a scam.

                        BANG
No man, no scam. I’ll sign something right now that gives you a writing credit for this song. Draw some agreement up on a napkin or something and I’ll put my John Hancock on it. Movie deals have been made over those kind of arrangements. Remember the film The French Connection?

                        LARRY
Yeah.

                        BANG
Well a dude made a boat old of money off that film ‘cuz he had a napkin signed by the producer, Phil Dantoni. Look it up. True story.

                        LARRY
Really? I love that movie. But look, this still seems weird. I’m sorry. Plus, I’m an attorney. It would look bad if I signed a legal agreement on a napkin.

                        BANG
Well I can dig that. My lawyer would probably freak out if he were asked to sign a napkin too.

                        LARRY
Who’s your lawyer?

                        BANG
Teddy Hack.

                        LARRY
Teddy Hack? From Hack, Ream & Shyster? The entertainment firm?

                          BANG
Roger that, Perry Mason.

                        LARRY
Are you in a band?

                        BANG
Bingo.

                        LARRY
Anybody I might know?

                        BANG
Maybe. Ever heard of "Mind Crisis"?

                        LARRY
Mind Crisis? You’re in Mind Crisis? So you’re the drummer, Bang? Formerly known as Stan Kablonski?

                        BANG
Bingo again, man.

                        LARRY
I love you guys! I didn’t recognize you without the long hair and the fu manchu mustache.

                        BANG
Cancer treatment will take away the hair, and I didn’t like the evil mad scientist look, so I shaved off the ‘stache.

                        LARRY
You’ve got cancer? I’m sorry to hear that. That hasn’t been in any of the music rags or trades.

                        BANG
I’ve kept it quiet. Don’t want my folks to know. Maybe after I beat it, I’ll tell them.

                        LARRY
Well I would be happy to lend you my wallet for your rhythm track. In fact, you can keep it. I hate that fuckin’ wallet anyway. My mother in law gave it to me.

                        BANG
Far out man. I’ll name the song…..what’s your name?

                        LARRY
Larry. Larry Van Pulin.

                        BANG
I’ll name the song "Larry’s Rhythm Wallet". How’s that?

                        LARRY
That's great! Thank you! This is too good to be true.

                        BANG
No man. I’ll tell you what’s too good to be true. Staying alive through this awful disease to be able to make music for people like you.

 

©2014 Clint Piatelli, MuscleHeart LLC, and Red F Publishing. All rights reserved.

Wednesday
Sep172014

Just Say No To The No of Yes

       My buddies and I at Villanova had this saying. The rock band Yes had released an album, 90125, during my junior year. It was actually a really kick ass, somewhat intricate but relatively straight forward rock record. But all the other progressive mumbo jumbo stuff they had done for most of their career before that didn’t interest any of us. About this same time, the saying “Just Say No To Drugs” was getting very popular. Well somehow, we married our distaste for most of the music of Yes with that silly slogan. Whenever the band’s name came up, one of us would say, “Just Say No To Yes”. It’s a running joke between all of us that still has milage today when we get together.
       For some inexplicable reason, our little saying came to me during meditation this morning. That’s one of the great things about meditating first thing. Not only is the brain less cluttered that time of day, but the mind is closer to the subconscious, having just awoken from sleep. Now, I admit,  some pretty wacky things float through my mind all day, but a lot of the wackiest shit hits me early in the morning and later at night. Which is probably why I do most of my writing at those times. It’s kind of my own personal “Magic Hour” for writing.
       This morning, “Just Say No To Yes” made me laugh aloud, and took me out of my meditation for a moment. But when I was through, my mind started riffing on the phrase, and something else hit me: how often in life do we say no to yes? Meaning, how big a role does resistance play in our lives? For most of us, a pretty significant one.
       This theme of resistance came up for me at Omega this summer during yoga, and I wrote about it my piece I Hate Yoga. I know that the more I’m saying "yes" in my life, the richer my life becomes. That doesn’t mean an indiscriminate “yes” to everything, meaning I can’t say "no" because I’m a people pleaser or don’t take care of myself. But it does mean that I pay attention to my own resistance. It means that I’m aware of the nature of my resistance. Is my resistance born from fear, and if it is, what is that fear? Most importantly, I examine where I am coming from. Am I coming from fear? Or am I coming from faith? Which really means coming from love.
       If there is a piece of me saying yes to something, and a piece saying no, which is not uncommon in many life situations, I want to know what’s running me. If my fear is running me, I’m in resistance mode. It’s important that I be able to discern my resistance. What am I afraid of, and is that fear blocking me from something I may want?
       Fear is a motherfucker. Most of us are fear based in at least one major area of our lives. Career, self image, money, physical security, sex, appearance, and the big one, intimate relationships.
       I can have fear in all of these areas. That’s normal. But how big a role does my fear play? Again, am I running it, or is it running me? Fear will not usually stop me from say, wearing something I want to wear because I fear what people will think. Fear will rarely stop me from writing about something I want to write about because I fear people will judge me. But I’m practiced at both of those. I take risks in both areas all the time.
       With intimate relationships, though, there can be an awful lot more at stake. Our hearts. Our beautiful, tender, precious hearts. I get that. But the principles are the same here as they are with what I wear or what I write. If I want something real, I have to take risks. I can’t let fear run me, or I will not be able to assess what’s my own voice, or voices, and what’s the voice of fear. And fear is an easy default, because it keeps me safe. There’s a saying that goes “A ship in a harbor is safe. But ships were not made for harbors.” The same is true of our hearts. Our hearts were not made to be closed, or fear based, but that’s how they get through the years because of all the hurt.
       How do we break this cycle of fear? We keep taking risks. We keep coming from faith, from love, instead of coming from fear. We practice. We never get it perfect, but we gradually pry open the grip of fear.
       It’s a lifelong process, this unraveling of our hearts. But it’s the only way to get to what we all want more of. Love. In all its forms, incarnations, and manifestations. A closed heart will never be able to give or receive love in a way that serves our soul.
       Today, I practice coming from faith, coming from love, instead of fear, in any and all my endeavors. I don’t do it perfectly, but I’m always at it. Relentlessly. Fastidiously. Open heartedly. I really want to radiate love to the world, as much and as often as I can.
       It’s risky, it’s not always easy, but it is the way I want to live my life.


©2014 Clint Piatelli, MuscleHeart LLC, and Red F Publishing. All rights reserved.

Tuesday
Sep092014

Universe Denter

       Came across this email that someone wrote to me a little over a year ago. When I read it then, it moved me. When I read it a few days ago, however, it still moved me, but it’s context is different today than it was fifteen months earlier.
       The email means something more to me now than it did then, because of where I’m at today and what I’ve come to. I have a viscerally different experience today when I read this little note than I did even just a few short months ago. That excites me to no end. Because that is true evidence of progress, of growth, of some sort of transformation.  
       And, if that were not enough, just now, as I’m writing this little prelude to the aforementioned email, a feather flies right in front of me. It hangs around for about half a minute, floating and darting, riding the air currents, just like in the movie Forrest Gump. In fact, exactly like in Forrest Gump. I’ve got goosebumps watching it here, outside of Starbucks in Cohasset, Massachusetts. Most coffee shops where I go to write don’t have tables outside. This one does, and I felt the pull of the outdoors. Taken with what I’m writing about, this little episode was yet another sign from the universe that I’m on the right track.
       Man, I love this shit…….

“Got a chance to read some of your stuff. I continue my thought from the other night....you are truly a fascinating guy. I've got a challenge trying to rationalize the whole package in my head - there's some really contradictory pieces you put out there. So for now, I'm just going to think of you as "the onion” (as in, you clearly have a lot of layers).

Glad you got inspired at your seminar yesterday. You inspired me too. You are clearly living your life out loud. I've done the complete opposite. I have done some really cool stuff, but have almost put the sunglasses on so people DON'T notice. Almost like, "if you have to tell people your cool, you aren't". They always have - I just always brush my stuff aside like I'm too cool to care. Or it would be arrogant to ask people to pay attention.

I've decided to take the sunglasses off. Time to live out loud a little myself. Granted, you'll never see me sporting a purple satin shirt kind of out loud, but I'm going to put my stuff out there and watch what happens. Meeting you was just one open door I happened to walk through, and I met a truly unique, authentic, cool person. And if connect all those dots over the course of a year, I bet I'll have a pretty amazing year.
So thanks for kicking it off. You made a dent in my universe. And that's pretty f'ing cool.”


       Today, I see this touching note as yet more testimony to my dharma, to my life’s calling, to my nature, to my way. I see it as more validation for what has become progressively clearer to me over the summer, especially during my time at Omega and Kripalu.    
        I dent people’s universe. Clint Piatelli: Universe Denter.
        I’ll take that.


©2014 Clint Piatelli, MuscleHeart LLC, and Red F Publishing. All rights reserved.   

Friday
Aug292014

Osprey

   

       When we open ourselves up to childlike fascination, wonder, excitement, awe, and curiosity, we increase our capacity for love. And we increase our capacity to experience the world anew.
        Think of how a little kid might look at this magnificent Osprey, maybe for the first time. The jaw dropping gleam in their eyes surpassed only by their complete rapturous engagement. They would stand there, transfixed, by what appeared to be a magic animal from a different realm. They would stare, simultaneously studying the animal and also engaged in a mindless awe.
       I know this, because this is how I experience not only this bird but lots of life. Whether its nature, the music I’m listening to, the woman I’m with, or the conversation I’m having, I strive to bring that passionate involvement, that sense of awe, wonder, curiosity, and fascination, to all my life.
       My summer at Omega and Kripalu opened up my heart and deepened my connection to my truest self. In the process, I experience both a quieting of my mind and the ignition of an engine within. I want to bring more of my fire to the world, and I want to help others find and ignite their fire. The book I’m writing will be a platform for that. But my whole life can be a platform for that too.     
       So here I am at fifty-one. I find myself with more capacity to love, more capacity to let love in - in all of its forms and manifestations - than ever in my life. I find myself with more capacity to experience the world anew. Furthermore, as I learn to more fully engage, as I learn to more fully allow, my capacity for love will only increase as I get older. Isn’t that fucking exciting? Isn’t that better than the other, conventional party line paradigm of diminishing returns of love as we get older? Isn’t the potential life altering expansions and experiences that are possible from the increasing love paradigm worth the risks? Fuck yeah.
       Fuck yeah.


©2014 Clint Piatelli, MuscleHeart LLC, and Red F Publishing. All rights reserved.