My House

February 15, 2007 - 3:05pm

The exterior of my house is very pleasing to the eye. It’s a modest, prairie home that is aging well and is comforting to look at. The porch is large, with chairs and a couple of swings. On the porch I am the perfect host - chatting, making people feel welcome, and carrying drinks around on a little tray. I’m very engaged in the conversations, actively listening, and moving smoothly from one group to the next.

People like the outside of my house and the front porch. I take great pride in that.

But I don’t invite many people inside my house. I need to know you pretty well before I let you see the interior, though I do have a variety of photo albums available on the porch. These photos are a carefully chosen selection from the various rooms inside my house. I’ve included a few safe, but slightly intimate photos of my private rooms, so that you’ll almost think you’ve been inside.

“Wow, these are great photos,” someone on the porch says. “So intimate and beautiful and daring.”

“Thank you,” I say with a big smile. “More lemonade?”

The people I allow inside are surprised to find that the interior looks nothing like what you’d expect in a prairie home. Through the front door is a large, open room that looks like a warehouse. Mounds of papers, books, and dirty plates cover the tops of tables and desks. Even some of the chairs have things stacked on them. Here and there are half-finished projects, some buried under piles of financial statements, unused calendars, and receipts. There is sawdust and trash all over the floor. Everywhere you look there are chewed pencils.

In the warehouse I rush back and forth in a mad panic, slapping things together, scribbling on papers, and stuffing things into envelopes. A phone is cradled on my shoulder, and I am shouting apologies into it. These apologies are as messy as the room, stitched together with lies and half-truths.

If I see you in my warehouse, I am deeply embarrassed and want to hustle you out of there as quickly as possible. I want everyone to think that things are as calm and peaceful inside as they are on the porch.

There is a door in one wall of the warehouse that leads to the family room, which is a kind of secret club. There is a very large lock on this door. Jeanene and I and the three sisters are the only ones with keys. Occasionally one of the girls rushes through the front door, dashes across the warehouse, and fumbles with the lock while looking over her shoulder in a panic. When the door opens, she slips inside with an audible sigh of relief.

One corner of the warehouse is more cluttered than the rest of the room. As you approach it, the mess gets more extreme until you think it can’t get any worse. Then you see the hidden, circular staircase that leads to a room below. Soft music floats up the stairs along with scents of patchouli and rosemary. Flickering lights from a fireplace below leap out of the hole in the floor and beckon to you to enter.

The stairs lead to my sanctuary. Because of the chaos above, it is astonishing that this room is perfectly neat and tidy, though it is obviously well used. Famous paintings are on the walls, and elegant, wooden shelves are filled with fine books with leather covers. The couches in front of the fireplace look deliciously comfortable, and you can smell pipe tobacco coming from tins on the mantel.

There is a home theater in one corner with a fabulous collection of movies and music. Fountain pens, inkwells, and heavy paper sit neatly on several wooden desks. All of my writing is done in this room. Finished works are stored here in perfectly organized filing cabinets.

I’m very proud of this room. In truth, it is the room I hope most defines me. When people visit here, I look up and acknowledge their presence, then go back to whatever I was doing. I sometimes find it difficult to engage people in my sanctuary; indeed I can barely hear their voices.

There is a circular, hobbit door in one wall of the sanctuary. It leads to a different sanctuary, one I abandoned in 1984. This room is filled with juvenile literature, science fiction, a record player, and an astonishing variety of sporting equipment. There are beanbag chairs all around and shag carpet. 70s and 80s rock and roll posters fill the walls. On one wall there are some framed pictures of girls in prom dresses. Their names are carefully carved into the frames. The colors of these photographs are fading, but they were clearly hung, long ago, in a place of honor and with great care.

Last year I entered this room for the first time in many years. I looked around a bit, smiled at the pictures of the girls, and then gasped when I saw my worn and beloved baseball mitt. I picked it up, smelled it, and took it with me when I left.

There is also a secret door in my sanctuary. If you push a hidden lever near the fireplace, a bookcase pops open to reveal a hidden room. There is only one person who knows how to push this lever. When she enters the room, her eyes sweep across the walls and shelves and then grow wide. She giggles and puts her hand over her mouth. Something on the other side of the room catches her eye. She stares at it intently. Her head tilts a little, and she squints. A smile slowly grows on her face. It is the Mona Lisa smile of a woman who knows that she is the one.

In the far wall of my hidden room is a door that has wedges and spikes pounded under it and around the edges. The door itself is scarred and splintered in places. It looks as though there has been a fight over whether to open it or keep it closed. From inside there is a furious pounding. Someone wants to come out. Someone selfish and extremely sensual, someone rude and very indulgent. Someone who would sacrifice anything for the pleasure of the moment. He needs pleasure, and he doesn’t give a damn about anything or anyone else. He’s angry as hell to be locked inside. You can hear him howling at night. And he swears that one day he will have his revenge.

On the floor, in a corner of my sanctuary, there is a heavy, wooden trap door. In the center is a black, iron ring. This is the door to the caverns beneath my house. It is very difficult to open this door. It takes a lot of courage and an enormous amount of strength. You have to grab the ring and pull with all your might. But sometimes this door pops open by itself, especially at night. If you walk by and find that it is open, it will slam shut as soon as you approach it.

Below the trapdoor are steps leading down into the darkness. Mysterious and frightening sounds rise from below. There is the sound of running water, the insane laughter of demons and lunatics, and grinding noises, like large gears slowly turning. Sometimes you hear the groans of slaves and prisoners who are apparently trapped below the house.

I’ve only gained the strength to open the trapdoor in the last ten years or so. In 2002 I began opening it regularly and going down the stairs. I bring up strange artifacts and set them on the mantle, where I puff away at my pipe and gaze at them in wonder. Sometimes I write about the things I find below. But it’s hard because when you write about what’s below, you cannot pass judgment. You can only describe what you have found. So many people do not understand that.

There are many other doors in the house. Some I have opened and others I have not. There is even a mysterious hallway that leads out of the house to places unknown. I do not know this house yet, but I am exploring more of it with each passing year.

These days a lot of people have been stopping by my front porch. The photos are there, of course, but lately I’ve been going down to the sanctuary and bringing up things I have written. I nail them to my front door or leave them on tables beside the swings. Sometimes I look out the window and am amazed to find that people are reading my work. All of it. Every blessed word.

A dear friend, one who spends time with me in front of the fireplace, recently asked me where God was to be found in my house. I tamped tobacco into the bowl of a simple wooden pipe and considered the question.

“It has taken me many years to discover the answer to that puzzle,” I say while lighting the pipe.

“As it turns out, God can be found in every room in this house. In all of them. And I am slowly learning to be comfortable with that.”

rlp

Prairie style home

 

Submitted by iandunn on February 15, 2007 - 4:56pm.

I liked that very much. I did notice one small mistake, and only point it out because you're probably just as anal-retentive about these things as I am: "There is only person who knows how to push this lever." (left out 'one')

Submitted by rlp on February 15, 2007 - 8:03pm.

Thank you so much! I've worked with three editors, and it takes some getting used to. But without a doubt, I enjoy having someone else take a look. I slowly lose the ability to read/hear my own work. But yes, every word matters to me, and I want them all to be just where they go.

Submitted by Anonymous User on February 16, 2007 - 9:03am.

preacher man, i have read your for years and i think this is one of my favorite things you've ever written. it touched my own inner landscape so deeply. thank you.

Submitted by Anonymous User on February 15, 2007 - 5:29pm.

amazing!

Submitted by Anonymous User on February 15, 2007 - 5:56pm.

If only the rest of us new the blueprints of our homes as well as you Gordon. Maureen

Submitted by shadow on February 15, 2007 - 6:02pm.

You had me hooked right away. Simply wonderful!

I saw the different rooms/doors as looking into oneself. For some, opening these doors you find so many hidden demons.

I just love this.

thanks

Submitted by Anonymous User on February 15, 2007 - 6:45pm.

An awesome read! But you know, how every great piece of work has one thing that catches your eye first? For me, today, it was "heavy paper". Wow...what a great visual..."heavy paper". I know exactly what that means.

Brilliant, as always.

Submitted by Anonymous User on February 15, 2007 - 6:54pm.

This is one of the most brilliant things you have written preacher. That is not to say that your other work is not good (it is), but this is inspired.

Submitted by Anonymous User on February 16, 2007 - 5:55am.

I do agree. Definitely. Indeed.

Submitted by xyp on February 15, 2007 - 11:38pm.

very nice. sounds like my home to a degree. messy spots and tidy spots. spots i'd want nobody to see, and spots i want everyone to see.
and, ahh, yes. God in the midst of all of them.

Honesty is the best policy, but insanity is a better defense.

Submitted by Anonymous User on February 16, 2007 - 12:12am.

Awww... I want a hobbit door...

--textjunkie

Submitted by rlp on February 16, 2007 - 6:56am.

Yeah, me too. So you can have one. I bet if you imagined your house, it would be full of them. ;-)

Submitted by atticus on February 16, 2007 - 12:21am.

i am so completely in awe of the openness of your house, this view that you have given us is so healing to those of us who have closed off our many rooms. you give us voice. and may i say one more time, thank you, thank you, for keeping the wedges under that pounding door. i hear God's voice over that shouting behing that door. you are in a position, you and that beautiful porch of yours that everyone adores, to open that door and use that power for your own gain. but you don't. you don't. and with that strength, the NOT opening of that door, you empower all of us to heal...and see our other rooms.

Submitted by Anonymous User on February 16, 2007 - 3:25am.

Thank you for the doors you open, in yourself and in others.

Submitted by Anonymous User on February 16, 2007 - 4:42am.

I relate in a deeply personal way to the metaphor of a house depicting my personal, inner life. I find it interesting that your "inner self" (OK that was my interpretation of the writing room!) was downstairs in your case. For me it was always upstairs. That is not a judgement, just an observation.

I have recurring dreams about houses, and in hindsight, I can see that there is often something that is happening or happened in my life that is represented in the metaphor. I had one not long ago, and it was a house under tremendous renovation. Upon reflection, that sure represents my life at the moment

Blessings
Janet McKinney

Submitted by rlp on February 16, 2007 - 6:55am.

Janet,

That's a wonderful observation. In fact,I think that may be the most interesting question of this whole dream/fantasy piece. Why is my thoughtful and reflective mental room below?

In my case, I chose not to think about this house much, but instead to write it as it came to me. Which is a little writer's trick that I alluded to. Don't ask or try to figure out the deep stuff. Just listen to your inner voice and pull your creativity from there. Write it. You can figure it out later. Of course, that leaves you vulnerable to revealing embarrasing things about yourself without realizing it. That's happened to me more than once.

I found myself wanting to go downstairs to describe my inner, thoughtful life, which is very orderly compared to my physical life.

I also wanted that room close to the caverns, because it is only when I am in my inner, thinking room that I have ever become consciously aware that there are deep forces within me.

Why it came out of me that way surely says some things about me. But I don't know what it says. I haven't listened hard enough to find answers to that question.

Submitted by Anonymous User on February 16, 2007 - 12:35pm.

Is it God trying to speak to us when we have these reflections? - or is it our spirit trying to make sense of what is happening in our lives? Oh - who cares. But I suspect that when an analogy makes sense to us, it seems to be repeated. For me it is in dreams. I wake up and I can remember every detail of the dream (well obviously as much detail as I can remember and I think it is every detail), and the emotions involved with it. I sometimes write them down, and it is surprising how often something happens in life around that time that makes sense of the analogy.

For me, things that happen in a house at entry level relates to my body and physical life. The upper floors relate often to my emotional and spiritual life. But I got the impression that your room went down because it represented a sense of deeper thinking. I like that.

My house is undergoing major renovation at the entry level. Ten days ago I had a gastric banding surgery to enable me to lose a lot of weight, in order that I can have some surgery and treatment for two significant health issues in my life. I never made the association with the metaphor before reading this - but it sure seems to make sense to me.

Is God trying to say something to me, or is it my inner self interpreting what is happening? I dunno, and who cares? But these moments bring a sense of real connection with God for me; that all is well in my world; and that there is meaning and purpose in what is happening in my life at the time.

Janet McKinney

Submitted by Anonymous User on February 16, 2007 - 12:37pm.

PS - the emotions involved with the renovation dream was anticipation, excitement, and as sense of redevelopment for a new and exciting future. I feel real good about these renovations.

Janet

Submitted by Anonymous User on February 18, 2007 - 10:06am.

"Don't ask or try to figure out the deep stuff. Just listen to your inner voice and pull your creativity from there. Write it. You can figure it out later. Of course, that leaves you vulnerable to revealing embarrasing things about yourself without realizing it. That's happened to me more than once."

Writings (or any form of art) where the creator tries to figure out the deep stuff beforehand, usually comes across sounding contrived and ends up lacking credibility or misses touching the heart. I think vulnerability is essential. You just gotta go for it.

I like the downstairs thing, like going deep or to the heart.
Mich

Submitted by An Observer on February 16, 2007 - 8:35am.

Amazing:

I wasn't aware that so many people lived in a house similar to my own. Why is it so hard to open some of those doors that have been shut for so long?

Pax

Submitted by TheEdge on February 16, 2007 - 9:17am.

The word "Real" in Real Live Preacher is what makes you and your writing so attractive. I cannot stomach people, especially fellow Christians, that only give you the front porch view. I know we cannot expect to be allowed into everyone's home but much can be gained, mutually, from the experience. That is how relationships and growth and accountability actually blossom. Great stuff!

Submitted by Anonymous User on February 16, 2007 - 12:43pm.

Preacher, this was just magificent - I always enjoy your writing, but IMHO, this is one of the pieces that I can share with my friends and say, "This is an example of why rlp has reaffirmed my faith in Christianity." Thank you for sharing this. I find it interesting that you hold the sensual beast locked up in prison. Maybe bind it with a titanium leash and then let it have some exercise in the yard? Blessings!

Submitted by rlp on February 16, 2007 - 3:02pm.

sensual is only one of the characteristics of this beast. And, in my view, we are all sensual to one extent or another. But this guy is WAY out of control. He only cares about what his skin is feeling.

I guess I'm saying that my description of the being locked away does nto mean that any of those characteristics might be okay in moderation.

Submitted by OldPoet on February 16, 2007 - 1:01pm.

OldPoet
Mona, hand over mouth, eyes wide...I will never get that word picture out of my mind.

Nice house!

Submitted by Anonymous User on February 16, 2007 - 1:12pm.

Beautifully written, your images mix together so well and you made the transition into the surreal portions of your house perfectly. I believe you, I believe that trap door exists.

Thanks,

Reagan

Submitted by Anonymous User on February 17, 2007 - 8:34am.

But it’s hard because when you write about what’s below, you cannot pass judgment. You can only describe what you have found. So many people do not understand that.

I have no words...

becky

Submitted by Anonymous User on February 18, 2007 - 7:58pm.

Very good! Thank you....

Submitted by hughman on February 18, 2007 - 10:26pm.

this reminded me of the blog post i wrote about "your house".

http://blogs.salon.com/0001573/2003/10/05.html

xxx roo

Submitted by rlp on February 19, 2007 - 12:21pm.

Oh yeah, I had forgotten that piece. That's from the old days. Back when the salon bloggers were our world and we used to visit each other's blogs and it really was like a family. yeah.

Submitted by Anonymous User on February 19, 2007 - 9:01am.

Wow, what a great piece. Since I'm moving in a week I can totally relate to the chaos immediately upon entering the front door. So much to do do do. But it was only when I got to the hobbit door that I realized it was a metaphor. Still applies but funny how it fits my life even taken literally right now. Thanks so much for sharing with us. --Lori the displaced Aggie

Submitted by Zanna on February 19, 2007 - 6:55pm.

Most wonderful. Beautifully illustrated, and incredibly moving. Thanks, Gordon.

Submitted by jethro on February 19, 2007 - 8:10pm.

Jethro

rlp
that was awesome

it described me as well

wish i could write that well
i will blog a link to this
cheers

Submitted by Keith on February 20, 2007 - 11:43am.

An old friend of mine wrote his doctoral thesis in anthropology on the symbology of the American front lawn. He asserted that it played a social role that wasn't entirely dissimilar from the European parlor: semi-public space, a presentation to society.

Your porch seems to play a similar role--but it's interesting to me that you left out the lawn entirely.

Submitted by mikemccloskey on February 20, 2007 - 12:06pm.

As a therapist, for years I have asked my clients to take me on a tour of their house - dark rooms and basements where guests do not go. Thank you for taking us on your tour. Having just moved out of our literal house this last weekend, I have much more appreciation for rooms, memories, heartache and hope.

Submitted by Anonymous User on February 21, 2007 - 7:56am.

I liked this-
It very much describes my process through the steps. The trap door analogy is specially relevant- It pops open on its own at times, and at others, it must be pried open forcefully.

Submitted by Anonymous User on February 21, 2007 - 12:50pm.

Wow! Thanks.

Submitted by Anonymous User on February 27, 2007 - 8:36am.

I have no words, RLP, you are a beautiful human being - dark corners and all. Thank you for enriching this world with your presence and quiet humility.

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