the liberation of fred: keep your heart open and the wisdom will show up

 
 

I traveled a lot of miles and with a bag full of Big Questions to bring to the sanctuary of the Christ in The Desert Monastery. Me, in my well-abused rental car and straw hat, ready for a cosmic breakthrough, I wanted some divine answers, dammit. I hoped to hear something omniscient and awe-inspiring by the cemetery overlook, or to find an eagle feather on my canyon hike. Maybe a coyote or a monk would cross my path just when I asked my heart-bleeding question and that would be my Big Sign.

Instead, I met Fred, in the gift shop. "When you're ready to pay for your candles and books you can just do it yourself on that table over there." D-I-Y cashier style, there was a shoebox of cash and a stack of credit card slips ... how civilized, I thought. "Gotchya. Cha-ching," I answered to Fred. And his curiosity about what "cha-ching" meant started us talking, (remember, no TV in the monastery, no People Magazine...I was probably the biggest dose of pop culture they'd seen in them hills for a while.)

Fred was a fifty-something Hispanic guy originally from L.A. For eighteen years, he's lived at the monastery as the custodian. "Eighteen years?! And you don't feel the call to serve as a brother after all this time?" I asked. "No way. I serve by serving the brothers."
"Wow. Well, way to go for making such an intense choice," I said.
"Every day is a choice. Obligation...all those obligations...marriage, kids, the job...it's all bullshit if it's not a choice."
He just swore in the monastery, I thought.
Fred continued. I was rapt. I set down my Frankincense and leaned in. His eyes sparkled.
"Say more," I nudged.
"When I left my old life to come here I was so afraid."
"Afraid of what?" I asked.
"Everything. I woke up two or three nights a week in a sweat, just afraid of life, of my choices. I was terrified to, you know, just live."
"Terrified to live." I repeated, nodding my head.
"And then four and a half years into it, I woke up and I was free. You know, free. Instead of always seeing just fifty feet in front of me there was a vista - I could see forever ahead of me."

He slid his hand out to gesture to the expanse. I could see it. I could see his state of being and there was nothing impeding his delight. We both kind of giggled, nodding, communing.

"Fred," I said, "That's all I need to know. I thought I was coming for the monks. But you're The Dude."

"Why thank you then. I'm happy to be the dude for you today."

You know that the teacher appears when you're ready. Sometimes it's a pop tune, or an ad on the bus, sometimes it's the handy man. Keep your heart open and you'll recognize the wisdom when it shows up...wearing overalls and fedora.

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  • Whitt
    this is beautiful..
  • Emerson Zora Hamsa
    I totally just cried. Thank you, Fred.
  • shannon
    my fav so far, thank you for sharing.
  • What I love most about this story is the big flashing sign that says "there's more than one route to happiness". I watch so many folks that are on a spiritual journey start walking down someone elses path instead of choosing their own, less obvious, route.
  • perfect! The universe as trickster. The key is being awake to see it.
    xo
    kvk
  • MoJo
    lol - that's why I said Coyote! I've always found that the 'trickster' element hasn't been malicious, but more of a gentle ribbing, reminding me that the 'signs' are always there, and causing me to chuckle at my yearnings for BIG signs. My one coyote run-in had me frozen in my tracks - those eyes....
  • MoJo *comment above yours) says coyote...you say trickster. In Native American Indian lore, Coyote is the Trickster. arooooo!
  • universe ~ trickster ~ coyote ~ Fred ... cool thing is that you had such a memorable conversation with Fred ~ coyote ~trickster ~ universe yip yip yip!
  • MoJo
    Fred was your coyote! Love finding wisdom in plain view, the miraculous in the mundane...thanks for the reminder ;-)
  • Your juicy, real-life stories always make my heart skip a beat and the hairs on my arm extend! You find truth and beauty in the strangest places - lesson of the day. Thanks D!
  • Well now, if that doesn't make me want to take a trip to visit the desert monastery. I totally want to meet Fred. I think he may be a monk of a different sort. He's definitely a minister.

    P.S. I laughed out loud when I read the bit about swearing in the monastery. I would have had that exact same thought.

    Thanks for sharing Fred with me today.
    *Blessings*
  • he actually swore quite a bit...it was kind of refreshing.
  • Vi
    This is truly a beautiful story. Thanks for sharing.
  • Love this - love Fred! Sorry for gushing, but these last two pieces have come at a really helpful time, Danielle. Thank you. Your enjoyment of this whole experience is just crackling off the screen. It's damp, grey and green here and I feel like I'm experiencing moments of holiday retreat and new vistas just reading about yours.
  • ga 'head and gush. gushing is good for all of us.
    Love
    D
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