| MoonTeachings
for January/February 2002:
More Lessons in Magic
by Dana
Gerhardt
“There are two kinds of
magic,” I declared, regarding my embarrassingly rich bounty of Christmas
gifts, “natural magic and the technological kind.” Santa had
brought me a super chrome espresso machine that with the push of a button
would measure my beans and grind them, brew me a perfect European-style
cup of coffee, then calmly clean and turn itself off. I was also
blessed with a digital camera that could assess the proper F-stop and shutter
speed, record an image (even sound!), then allow me to view, crop, save,
email or delete the shot without ever going to a developer or changing
a roll of film. Like magic!
The trouble is that neither
came with a mentoring wizard. Rather, accompanying each was a thick
booklet that pronounced its secrets in print as tiny and humorless as a
legal document’s. I carried the instruction books from room to
room, hoping this might prove an esoteric form of transmission; but after
a week, I discovered I was no wiser. I stared haplessly out at
the orchards, the spinning clouds, the rising moon… natural magic I can
understand. Yesterday, for example, I discovered how a row of mature
pear trees whispers altogether different messages from its neighboring
row of saplings. I can’t translate precisely, but I can tell you
that it was thrilling, like the spontaneous, graceful patterns of the hundred
brown birds that were working their way through the trees and up the hill.
I know I’m being unfair.
One shouldn’t compare natural magic to the kind wrought by humans -- no
doubt well-meaning engineers, who don’t read any poetry, but visit internet
singles sites, play endless computer games and worry about their 401k’s.
This is why technological magic is overly complicated and not at all intuitive.
It only makes sense in a small circle of cubicles. Yet I did want
European style coffee without having to drive all the way to Starbucks.
Like Tom Cruise heading for flight school in “Top Gun,” I steeled myself
to tackle the espresso machine’s instructions.
Over three days, spending
an hour each day… I succeeded in mastering the lights and control
panel, prepping the machine, and ultimately, brewing a cup of coffee.
But the espresso, which Robert said was supposed to be the best in the
world, a claim confirmed by the instruction book’s accompanying video,
dribbled out in my kitchen like dirty dishwater. Friends came over
that night and thinking to help, began pushing my complicated prodigy’s
buttons like a slot machine until I feared it would flame and burst through
the roof.
“Hey Mom, I have something
to show you.” Days later, it was the full moon. This is
a time for revelations, and one never knows from which corner they’ll come.
My son had my new Harry Potter wand in his hands, another of my techno-Christmas
gifts. Pushing the wand’s plastic buttons ignited colored lights
and a sort of disco wizard music, followed by a vaguely sinister digital
voice, cackling a Latin-like phrase and concluding with great satisfaction,
“Now your powers are all mine!” It made no sense but was entertaining
for anyone standing in the kitchen with nothing else to do.
“Did you know it could do
this?” Branden pushed the wand’s buttons in an artful sequence that
evoked a new string of Latin-like words, empowering the user with a spell
that sounded and sparked at the wand’s tip like a lightning flash.
The perfect thing to point at kids not cleaning their rooms or eating their
peas! “How did you figure that out?” There had been no instructions
on the package. Branden said he simply sat with it awhile, pushing
buttons… Until its secret was revealed. In other words,
he listened to it… the same way I listen to trees.
My smart thesis dissolved.
Technological magic was as intuitive as natural magic… if
you approached it clean as a child, with an uncomplicated curiosity and
a willingness to play. And why not? Don’t espresso machines,
digital cameras, orchards and the moon all spring from the same great mind
of the divine, in thoughts as brilliant as birds and awesome as constellations?
I remembered once hearing of a Tibetan lama who helped repair a stalled
car even though it was the first time he’d ever ridden in an automobile.
He just popped open the hood and gave himself to the engine until he understood.
Over the next few days, I
played with my espresso machine until we “communicated.” I am now
happy to report that, like magic, every morning it offers me the best cup
of cappuccino in the world. As for my digital camera, I confess I’m
not ready for it yet. But when I am, I know exactly what I need to
do.
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