I regularly begin a life-altering trip that is sometimes plagued by potholes and other interruptions. Even as a child, I may have resisted a natural urge to go to sleep. I am not sure that I understand the full weight of sleep, or the lack of it, on one’s way of living; I don’t know, for certain, if it is more of one’s body or more of one’s mind.
I remember the anguish that I at times experienced as I seemingly struggled with the dark in an attempt to journey, from the conscious, toward mental oblivion and physical repose, and I have in the day hence, when the trip did not happen, suffered by weariness of both mind and body. Often times, when morning finally came, I felt as if I had wrestled with an alligator throughout the night.
I made the trip on the back seat of an automobile while traveling to further places, I made it on a king size bed at home, and one time, I made the trip while sitting in an antique rocking chair. However, I am not as mindful of the consequences of a trip completed, as I am of a try that was unsuccessful.
Many times, in the small hours between midnight and dawn, I would have given all my stake for one short stay in that sometimes elusive place of sound slumber, a symbolic place, that has been called the well of renewal. A present goal is to perfect the art of suspending the conscious, and to awake refreshed with no recollection of the interim
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