I’ve seen the blue door just once.
It was a warm summer night. It had been roughly 36 hours since
I last ate anything, but I had cigarettes. In those days, that was enough. I sat
cross-legged on the worn mattress that served as a bed, my body a thin slice of
electricity. The mattress, covered by the only quilt I owned, sank beneath my
weight. The air in the apartment pressed down on me, a physical sensation at
odds with the tingling sensations running throughout my body. I closed my eyes
for a moment. When I opened them, the blue door was in front of me, just inches
above the mattress.
A warmth enveloped my head. I stood up slowly, afraid if
I moved too fast the door would disappear. It was a pedestrian door, a standard
closet model you might see in any living space. The only thing unusual, besides
its location, was the striking color blue it was painted. Azure: a middle hue,
not so dark as navy, not so light as sapphire. Not a crack in the paint job,
not a streak or smear. Still, it was merely a door. Are we ever interested in
the door? No, only what lay behind it. I realized there was one more unusual
thing about this door: it had no doorknob or handle—not even a mark upon the
door to indicate where one might once have been.
Standing now, I stepped off the mattress and looked on
the other side. The door looked the same. Azure, no handle, no distinguishing
marks. Ok. My body hummed, vibrant with electricity. My veins had become powerlines.
Did it matter what side I opened the door from? I had no context with which to
approach this question, any more than I did for any question involving the door,
since it couldn’t actually be there. That it was there rendered all but the
most basic musings moot. I returned to the mattress, reasoning that I should
open it from the side that initially faced me. I didn’t know if I had conjured
it, but I didn’t know that I had not conjured it either.
I gently placed my hand middle-left on the door and
pushed. It swung open.
What I saw was water and sky. The water went in all
directions, emerald green and oblique. The sky was clear, light blue, and met
the ocean on the horizon. All seemed peaceful and empty. Though I could not prove
it, my electrical bones told me there was no life in that sea, and my
electrical bones seemed to know more about what was going on than my rational
mind, which was at a loss for the whole incident. I stared at the sea for a
while, waiting for something further to happen, but nothing did. I leaned
through the opening, keeping my knees firmly planted on the bed. The air was a
tad cooler through the door, but I had no difficult breathing. In fact, the warmth
in my head was spreading down my body, de-buzzing my shell and allowing my
breathing, which had been coming in short sharp bursts, to steady.
I thought to touch the water, but kept my hands at my
side.
I pulled my head back in and closed my eyes. When I
opened them, the door was gone. I’ve not seen it since, though I’ve thought
about it on occasion through the ensuing twenty-five years. If you would ask, I
would dismiss the whole incident as a hallucination, brought on by too little
food and too much warmth (the preceding day had been quite hot, getting close
to triple digits.) I accept this explanation, and I know it’s false. False
because the nature of reality is far more subjective than we generally allow
ourselves to believe, and false because the door was not a lie. Just because I
did not and do not understand the door or where it opened to, does not mean it
did not open to a truth. The rational explanation allows me to get out of bed
in the morning and do things. The rational explanation lets me sleep most, but
not all, nights.
Take apart the fear and clean out the arteries. How does
an atheist define soul?
Can an atheist have a visionary experience, without
ascribing it to a higher power? If the atheist attributes the experience to
something unknown, does that something unknown become a higher power? Processes
are happening across the universe at this very moment, witnessed by no one. We
still do not know what dark matter or dark energy is, even though—at this moment—we are reasonably sure it
exists.
It is true that in the preceding two years leading up to
the blue door incident, I’d done a fair share of drugs. It is also true that in
the year leading up to the blue door incident, I’d gone from an intense crush
to having the crush returned to being in a relationship, the first truly
serious one of my life. Love is a drug, as the saying goes. Love alters
perception. Triggers chemical reactions.
When the blue door incident occurred, I was in the midst
of a two-month window where I was largely drug free. I was stone broke,
jobless, living alone and in a long-distance relationship (my girlfriend some
200 miles away, and I had no transport or money, visits were rare.) I wrote a
lot: letters, poems, stories. I read a lot: fiction, music journalism,
philosophy, religion. I walked a lot: miles every day, around the decaying,
empty and sometimes sketchy parts of Spokane. I had no phone. I was the most
invisible I would ever be, the most alone, and perhaps the most free.
Everything was worthy of exploration.
At the time I could not call myself an atheist; I
remember deciding firmly I was an agnostic after reading one particularly
passionate passage in Dostoyevsky’s The
Idiot that set my heart racing, bursting with joy at the wonder of it all.
An agnostic didn’t have to be noncommittal, I thought—simply open to ideas.
Certainly to evidence, should one ever manage to prove the unknowable. I didn’t
want to risk giving up the idea of ecstatic experience. I also was beginning to
falter in my belief that I would not live long, and in those moments when the
light managed to shine through the cracks, I wanted to perhaps hedge my bets a
little.
But the blue door was not an ecstatic vision.
It was just a door, azure blue, that appeared slightly
above my mattress and opened to an empty world. Did it exist in “this” world? I
was the only one in my apartment; there would never be any independent
verification. I didn’t want to accept it on faith, yet I seemingly had no
choice. Accept or deny. It happened, or it did not. I came to realize over the
following years that this is a dangerously limiting perspective.
It should perhaps be mentioned that I was only a few
months removed from a drug-triggered nervous breakdown and so my definition of
reality was a bit shaky. Not in terms of seeing things that weren’t there, or
talking to ghosts, or anything so melodramatic. What gripped me was the fear
that such a state as I’d been in during my breakdown could randomly happen
again. What if my heart is beating too
fast and I can’t control it? What if I can’t talk, my mouth gluepaste and sewn
shut with wire? What if I die? What
if I think I’m dead but I’m not? Etc. In this alone, empty time, I was
doing my best to confront the fear. To acknowledge it, even respect it, but not
let it have control. Intuitively I grasped that if I did not do so, I would
never build a life for myself or believe myself to be worthy of love.
During the blue door incident, I surprisingly never felt
fear. The tingling, electric feeling was not one of anxiety—my body was simply
extremely awake. I felt curious and perhaps a bit detached. When I opened the
door and saw the water and sky, I felt I knew the place, and this allowed me to
remain calm. I didn’t know the place, of course, not in this world anyway
(dreams are a whole different matter, I can’t claim I haven’t glimpsed it while
traveling those strange pathways) but I felt open, open to the very emptiness
of the place. An emptiness that was somehow…warm. Like my soul had been wrapped
in a blanket. My mind, for once, was quiet. Not running in a million
directions, not full of endless buzz. It’s similar to the state I enter when
the writing and creativity is flowing and I cease to exist for a bit. This was
different, though. I was not channeling anything, I was not creating anything.
I was observing, but I could not be sure if it was with my conscious mind.
I’ve never been a practitioner of meditation, though I am
attracted to the idea in abstract. It could be argued that I was in some sense
meditating that evening when the blue door appeared, just like it could be
argued I was already in an altered state, depending how liberal one’s
definition of those terms are. I certainly associate that strange empty warmth
with such a state. If that is what death feels like, then death is not
something to be feared (and fear loses its value; don’t all our fears boil down
to death, either ours or someone important to us?) Of course, death is the
process of vacating the body; physical sensations like warmth presumably cease immediately.
Could it be some part of my soul (for lack of a better term) perceiving something
my conscious mind has no framework for, and as such my conscious mind reached
for the images and sensations that best translated this perception? A bit of
mind/soul teamwork?
Ah, but now we are into metaphysics and treading
dangerously close to New Age pablum. I’ve never owned a crystal, I’ve never
chanted, I’ve never done woo stuff because I’m simply not drawn to it. An atheist
can excuse it if they want (we are just talking in metaphors, love, good ol’
metaphors—we don’t literally believe it) but that’s not something I’ve been
comfortable with on a personal level. The blue door was real, even if it wasn’t.
It was a rehearsal for death, it was outside the scope of death. If I could
untangle that paradigm…well, I worry that my conscious mind would break. And
that is a fear I’ve never quite shaken, no matter how much I think I’ve made my
peace with my breakdown.
I kiss the sun in fear. I never learned to swim.
I have an irrational fear of drowning (though I quibble
with the term “irrational”; I mean, if I fall into the ocean I’m fucked.) I’ve
had many dreams of drowning, it has frequently figured prominently in my
creative output, and I can’t peer over the railing’s edge on the ferry. I can’t
even get close to it. At the same time, I am fascinated by shipwrecks, by stories
of drowning, and by deep bodies of water (strangely, I’m not obsessed with fast
moving bodies of waters like narrow rivers or waterfalls.) Behind the blue door
lay endless water: my fear and my obsession. I perceived a world I could not
possibly exist in. It would be romantic to say I conquered my fear, but nothing
changed. The water was a metaphor, then? Well, I can’t discount that theory,
but I don’t fully buy it either. It was there. It was a definition of reality.
Take apart the fear and clean out the arteries. Changing
the diet doesn’t guarantee clean machinery going forward. We will all die. We
all hope to meet death with a measure of grace. This is not enough, to wait for
death. We have a lifetime to practice grace and kindness.
And that is the one conscious change this incident
triggered in me. Ever since, I do my best to greet each day with a measure of
grace and say goodbye to each day with thanks. I do not always meet this
challenge, and in fact my percentage is much lower than it should be. But I
strive for it, every day. Atheists don’t pray, but we do talk to the cosmos.
Some of us do so quite frequently.
I will never untangle the blue door incident. I don’t
think it is meant to be untangled, at least not on a conscious level. None of
us—not a single one of us—has an iron grip on the definition of reality. We all
create our definition, we all create our worlds, and we could all stand to be
kinder to our fellow travelers. A little warmth goes a long way.
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