The Only Cure for Self-Deception

Self-Deception (maxtapety.pl)Source: maxtapety.pl

The Wishing Map is a full-length fantasy that is being posted episodically at this site. To read the previous episode click here. To read it from the start, click here.

Gina is entangled in the tentacles of a shape-shifting Beast that has assumed the one form she can’t bear to destroy: her perfected self, Divine Gina.

“Let go of her!” her brother shouted. “You can’t have her!” Gina heard a loud stomp, then a horrid shriek, followed by a slimy squish and a sack-of-potatoes grunt. “Ow, crud! Ow! Agghhh…” Zack’s voice gurgled into silence. All that remained was a torturous rasp, like air rushing from a punctured tire.

“Zack? What’s wrong?” Gina forced herself to look away from her flawless twin. What she saw made no sense. There on the turf was her brother—with a foot on his neck. Why would Divine Gina do that, and why did her foot have talons instead of toes? Its jagged yellow claws were piercing Zack’s flesh, causing blood to pool around him. His eyes were darting back and forth in an effort to track the movements of Divine Gina’s…tentacles? None of this made any sense.

Why would Gina’s beautiful, perfected self do this? Was it really happening? What should she do? She’d ask her perfect self, of course! But when she looked up again, Divine Gina suddenly looked a lot less divine. There were hairy hoses sticking out of her face, and her mouth wasn’t a mouth at all, but a muzzle filled with jagged, broken teeth. And her smell! It invaded Gina’s pores like death. And now she—it—was beginning to shrivel and shrink, its flawless flesh turning rotten and grey.

“Jeeeeeeenuhhh,” a voice choked.

“Zack?” Suddenly, what was left of Gina’s divine delusion vanished. There was Zack pinned to the ground, with the Beast about to vacuum his eyes out and plunge its cuisine-art snout into his torso. In a moment her brother would be dead!

“No!” Gina raised her broadsword over her head and brought it down in a furious blur. The Beast saw the flash and disentangled itself from its prey, but not in time to avoid a series of succulent shlunks as the blade hacked through one, two, three, four, five of its tentacles! It screeched like a banshee and jerked away.

Gina dropped to her knees. “Zack? No, no, no, no, don’t be dead. Please don’t be dead!” She caressed the bloody slits in his neck. “Zacky, get up! Please!”

Her brother eyes slid open. “Crud, that hurt!”

“Oh, Zack! I know, I know! I’m sorry, I’m sorry!”

“Why didn’t you—? Look out!”

“What?” Gina jumped to her feet and whirled around, ready to deliver the final blow. But the Beast wasn’t attacking, it was simply staring at them, its soulless eyes unable to comprehend what it was seeing.

And then Gina looked at the mesh patch between its eyes.

“No, Gina, don’t!”

φ

Thoughts: Love, real love, is the only cure for self-deception.

Wishing Title 2 (logo only)

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October Skies

It’s the northern half’s most beautiful month, when leaves and sunrises vie to out-blush one another, and clouds and moons stage sunset tableaus. Nostrils flare as the air turns apple-crisp. Gloves and mufflers appear, walks demand to be taken, cats demand laps, books demand eyes and windows sighs. September expires of old age, but October dies in youth. So embrace it before it’s gone!

Click on any image to enlarge it, or to begin slide show.

“I’m so glad I live in a world where there are Octobers.”
~
L. M. Montgomery

“There is something in October sets the gypsy blood astir: We must rise and follow her,
When from every hill of flame she calls, and calls each vagabond by name.

~William Bliss

“I wish that every day was Saturday and every month was October.”
~Charmaine J. Forde

October gave a party
The leaves by hundreds came
The Chestnuts, Oaks, and Maples
And leaves of every name
The Sunshine spread a carpet
And everything was grand
Miss Weather led the dancing
Professor Wind the band
~George Cooper

“Although I was born in April, I’m quite certain I was not fully awake until October.
~Peggy Toney Horton

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Life Beyond the Tunnel

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My Age of Anxiety

A true story

It would be nice if my age of anxiety had ended with my breakthrough in the desert. It hadn’t. But something had changed; I’d moved from trying to control my thoughts to learning how not to control them. The less I feared my thoughts, the more they became my own — and the more I realized I wasn’t alone.

The following year, I titled my journal, “The Year of New Beginnings.” I wasn’t out of the tunnel yet, but the circle of light was growing. I had a life. I’d been in a well-known comedy act and was starting another. I was touring, recording albums, shooting videos, and teaching.

Still, why stop there? I met with a therapist, but his “let’s talk about your parents” approach felt off — like taking cough medicine for a sprained ankle. I suspected my issue was more about bio-chemistry than childhood memories. So, I tried running to boost my endorphins, but developed runner’s knee. I panicked when a three-year-relationship ended, and tried to control my thoughts again. But God whispered, “No. Let go,” and I managed to resume my “don’t flee, don’t fight—flow” mode.

Then I met the girl I would marry. She had no interest in being a surrogate therapist, and I had no interest in making her one. Life was sweeter, completer. Still, most nights I wandered in search of that elusive doorway to sleep.

I began reading up on anxiety. My two drugs of choice were coffee and whiskey, and I learned that in people with OCD these can deplete the sense-of-well-being cocktail our brains naturally produce, resulting in a fight-or-flight response. I also learned that in some people niacin (vitamin B3) can help restore those chemicals. So I quit alcohol for a year, cut my java by half, and started taking niacin. Result?

After ten years in the tunnel, I stopped worrying about stepping on cracks, and stepped out into the light. I’ve had a few minor flare-ups since then, but can honestly say, “I’m the guy who used to suffer from anxiety.”

Would I willingly take that journey again? No! I’m not crazy! (I only thought I was.) Nevertheless, I’m glad I went through it. Because I learned who I was in that tunnel and, with God’s guidance, who I was becoming.

An old high school friend told me I’d “lived a charmed life.” Hah! I thought. If you only knew! Then again, I have found the proverbial silver lining: my obsessive brain helps me imagine stories to life. And more importantly, what I’ve been through has deepened my empathy for others, empowering me to counsel people with similar pathologies. No, I’m not a therapist, just a seasoned hiker on the neurotic trail.

But “lived a charmed life”?

Well, yes, perhaps I have.

This is the fourth and final My Age of Anxiety post. To read the first three, click here.

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Halloween Is Coming!

It Came from Outer_thumbnail (mitchteemley.com)Preachers, teachers and group leaders: This classic routine from the bestselling comedy video Mitch & Allen Live! (1983) is a great kicker-offer for sermons or discussions on the nature of evil, or for Halloween alternative events! My comedy partner Allen and I had been watching The Blob, a classic monster movie from the 1950s, when it struck us that this was how sin (evil) entered the world. First, it consumed a couple of naïve teenagers – and then it spread like a hideous blob! It Came From Outer Darkness is available from my short film distributor Sermon Central.

To learn more, or to download the video, click here!

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My Computer Crashed!

toon-1073Well, OK, it didn’t exactly “crash.” I mean, there was no hole in the wall. There were no other bleeding computer owners standing around threatening to sue my pants off. Seven years (and one computer) ago, I somehow managed to delete a massive number of important files in one swell foop!

I took it to an IT expert, but he couldn’t recover the lost files because, he explained, they weren’t there anymore, not even in the dark abyss of hard drive Hades. Apparently, while I was googling to see what to do about the lost files my hard drive was happily writing over what was left of them!

So, I spent three days in cyber purgatory. Three days without a computer. Can you feel my pain? Yes, I have a phone, and, no, it’s not the same thing, you little Gen-Z twits!

My wife had no sympathy. Instead of being online networking with “all my little blogger pals” (no, she didn’t say that, but she thought it), I was forced to go for a walk with her (she always walks–she uses those outdated analog things, those, you know, “leg” things). We breathed in the crisp fall air, and watched the sun turn rosy-gold against a deepening blue sky, as warm, inviting lights clicked on in houses…with working computers!

Seriously, I did miss my little blogger pals. But I was also sort of glad it happened. It was like when someone’s house burns down and they stand watching from their neighbor’s yard, shivering and full of irrational joy.

Why? Because what really matters is that the people they love made it out, even if the furniture and clothes–and computers–didn’t, and they’re reminded just how much they treasure one another. Yes, they already knew that, but they’d started taking it for granted. Because they’re human, and that’s what humans do, take each other for granted and forget what really matters.

After all, in the end, what do I really need but love?

Well, a working computer would be nice.

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Love. Before It’s Too Late.

Ice Wall in Antarctica.jpg

My Real Memoir

My dad, Bill Teemley, was ambitious, hard-working, and deeply conservative. I was a wildly liberal almost-23-year-old with a “useless” Theatre Arts degree and no job, who’d recently moved back in with the folks. Not surprisingly, a massive wall of ice had grown up between us, and we barely spoke. I didn’t get him, and he sure didn’t get me. So I figured he never even thought about me. Still, with my latest theatrical brainstorm in limbo, I had time on my hands.

So I asked Mom what I could do about The Wall.

“Well, you could go with him to pick up papers,” she suggested. Dad’s job as a Los Angeles Times dealer included picking up bundles of newspapers from the plant at 3:30 a.m. seven days a week. So naturally my response was,

“Is there something else I could do?”

Mom looked at me and blinked.

So I told Dad I thought it might “fun” to go with him.

He woke me up at 2:30 the next morning. I thought I was in purgatory.

We drove to Denny’s where, to my surprise, Dad wasn’t a generic “hun” but a warmly hello-ed “Bill.” We avoided each other over omelets.

But the next morning, we actually had a conversation. It went something like this:

“The coffee here sure is…brown.”

“Yep.”

dennys-buena-parkFor three months, I went with Dad to pick up newspapers, always stopping at Denny’s, each time saying a little more.

We never had any Big Talks. But as spring turned to summer, we slowly rediscovered each other. Nothing magical—unless you count being able to laugh together again magical. Just us.

When I finally relaunched my theatre group and had to stop meeting with him, I actually missed our mornings together.

Being a newspaper dealer, Dad had a couple dozen carriers, mostly college guys, who picked up their papers at 4:00 a.m. and disseminated them to the sleeping world. But every other week, one of them would fail to show up. And then Dad would have to deliver newspapers in the dark.

July 20th was one of those mornings.

I was still asleep when the phone rang. Mom answered it at her end of the house, but was suddenly next to me pushing on my shoulder:

“Honey, wake up. It’s about your dad…” She didn’t know any more than that. She didn’t want to. Because if she knew more, it would make it real.

I drove us to the hospital through a sea of undulating hope and fear. Neither of us spoke.

When we got there, we gave them Dad’s name and were ushered into a room with a curtain. Suddenly Mom was the child and I was the grown-up. A doctor entered and pulled back the curtain. Mom gasped.

stock-footage-an-empty-emergency-roomThere was nothing there but Dad’s wallet and keys.

“Where is he?” I asked.

“I’m sorry. Mr. Teemley has passed.”

“So, they moved him to another…?”

“Mr. Teemley is dead.”

“No. You mean…” If I couldn’t see him, he couldn’t be dead.

The doctor told us what little they knew: Dad had had a heart attack while delivering newspapers and been found several hours later. It was just enough to solidify the nightmare into a stony reality that we could never wake up from.

We drove home in silence. There were no undulating layers now. Only a grey, featureless sea of despair.

When we got home, I couldn’t cry. I had to be there for Mom. She moaned like an animal with its foot caught in a trap, never speaking any actual words.

Finally, a couple of hours later, I got up and thumbed through Dad’s wallet. It contained five photographs: One of Mom and four of me.

I called Mom’s sister and asked her to tell everyone on both sides of the family.

Then I called my childhood BFF Jeff, and asked him to tell all our friends. I was matter-of-fact. Monotone. I had to be.

“How are you doing?” he asked.

And then I said what I hadn’t even known I was thinking:

“I never told him I loved him.” And the tears broke.

That was when Mom, as if released from a spell, suddenly stood, walked over to me, and said, before enfolding me in her arms,

“You told him every day for three months.”

If you love someone—or, worse, if you fear you don’t—tell them you love them.

Before it’s too late.

In memoriam:

I love you, Dad.

Always did, and always will.

Bill Teemley-mid 50s

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Opinions!

Finger-Pointing Man

“My opinions may have changed, but not the fact that I’m right!” ~Ashleigh Brilliant

“I dislike you for the same reason I dislike Former Me and Future Me – because they disagree with Current Me!” ~Mitch Teemley

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Thought for the Week

“Do not be angry that you cannot make others as you wish them to be, since you cannot make yourself as you wish to be.” ~Thomas á Kempis

“Let me never fall into the vulgar mistake of dreaming that I am persecuted whenever I am contradicted.” ~Ralph Waldo Emerson

“When you plan a tower that will pierce the clouds, first lay the foundation of humility.” ~Saint Augustine

“Remember this: Civility costs nothing, and buys everything.” ~Mary Wortley Montagu

“Let us pardon reciprocally each other’s folly, (for) that is the first law of nature.” ~Voltaire

“Resolve, therefore, to be tender with the young, compassionate with the aged, sympathetic with the striving, and tolerant of the weak and the wrong. Sometime in life you will have been all of these.” ~George Washington Carver

“If we lose love and respect for each other, this is how we finally die.” ~Maya Angelou

“With all humility, gentleness and patience, bear with one another in love.” ~Ephesians 4:2

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God Is Not “Safe”

Aslan

How do you know if your god is false? Short answer: If they are only there when you want them to be, and consistently perform as you expect them to, you’re probably worshipping a god of your own invention. In what conceivable universe would an infinite God be limited by the expectations of a finite, self-absorbed creature called [insert your name here]?

One particular cult puts central emphasis on the phrase, “’Come let us reason together” (Isaiah 1:18), pulling it out of context and insisting that it means if anything is beyond our understanding it can’t be true. I heartily beg to differ. One of the surest signs of a false religion is the degree to which it has its god pigeonholed.

Don’t get me wrong, I trust God completely, even when he stubbornly refuses to dance to the tunes I call. Actually, the guy whose judgments I don’t trust is finite, self-absorbed little me. I’ll take my Creator’s dangerous and unexpected–but ultimately loving–decisions over mine in any universe you care to choose. Because, as C. S. Lewis famously said,

“He is not safe, but he is good.”

~AΩ-

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Our Greatest Enemy

Girl With Mirror

“Our greatest enemy lives in the mirror.”

~The Wishing Map

φ

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Divine Delusions

Divine (deviantart.com)Source: deviantart.com

The Wishing Map is a full-length fantasy that is being posted episodically at this site. To read the previous episode click here. To read it from the start, click here.

Entangled in the tentacles of a monstrous Questing Beast, Gina has cried out for help to Rhema, the one who sent her to face this shapeshifting creature.

The needles and suction retracted. Gina fell backward, and there before her was the Beast in its native form. But its medusa-like head was turned to the side. Someone was attacking it!

It was her brother! Zack was dancing in and out of range, kicking the monster as hard as he could, hurling rocks and sticks at it, but without a real weapon he was in constant peril. Just as he ran forward to bash it with a branch, one of its tentacles snaked itself around his wrist. The barbs cut like fish hooks as it reeled him in toward multiple rows of whirling teeth.

“Hey, you!” screamed Gina. “Smelly boy!”

The creature spun around, releasing Zack, and flung all of its “arms” at Gina. She limboed backward just as half-a-dozen eelish appendages whizzed past her. Then she cocked her right arm and swung her broadsword at the Beast’s head, lopping off two of its tentacles! Its wheeze turned into a shriek as pus gushed from the stumps.

But then she made the mistake of looking between the creature’s eyes again. All of my dreams, she suddenly thought, they’re right here. My destiny is right here! “No!” she shouted, smacking her face with her free hand. She raised her sword.

But the Beast had already begun changing again. Its armored platelets were melting together, turning soft and pliable. It was human now, only thinner, lighter, and taller than Gina, and impossibly beautiful. It was Gina!

Only more. More perfect. More everything. And Gina suddenly knew she was less than she should be, infinitely less. Could Beautiful Gina even see the shorter, inferior version of herself? No, but then she was here to be seen, not to see, because she was more than merely Beautiful Gina–she was Divine Gina! Gina stepped forward and offered Divine Gina the sword.

“Gina! No!” shouted Zack. At the same time, she felt a painful pricking. The sword was thrashing wildly in her hand, straining to pull her arm into strike position. It seemed even more bent on killing Divine Gina than it had the Beast! Gina heard punching and flailing sounds, and something like whips beating the air.

“Gina!” Zack shouted again.

And then Divine Gina smiled at her!

“Gina! No!”

“But she’s smiling at me!”

“Use the sword!”

Needles…sucking…pain growing worse by the second.

“Gina! It’s not real! Kill it!”

“I can’t kill myself, Zack!” It was her future self. But not if she killed it. If she killed it, she’d become non-tall, non-beautiful, non-Divine Gina. She’d become “Frumpy Office Worker Gina” or “Lonely Middle-Aged Teacher Gina” like in her dream!

“Gina, you have to kill it now!”

The stinging and tugging felt like it was about to tear her skin off. But that was good, right? Then Divine-Gina-skin would grow in its place! “I can’t, Zack. It’s my future!”

“No! It’s a lie!”

φ

Thoughts: Our greatest enemy lives in the mirror.

Wishing Title 2 (logo only)

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