Be Quick
I’m on the back of His Enduro,
through the alkaline dust of the desert,
we ride by the full moon’s light,
the three Pyramids of Giza casting perfectly measured silhouettes,
so dark they could be shadows,
and we both know time is of the essence,
so we are trying to Be Quick,
I’ve got a train to catch,
a one way ticket to Luxor,
but they say life is the journey not the destination,
so we’re always going even if we don’t always know where,
here,
on the back of this bike,
I hold on to Him for dear life,
as the back wheel kicks up the Sands of Time,
His bike obediently continuing into the night,
I don’t know where we are going,
but I know if I live to write about it I will,
because I am a writer and writing is what I do,
it’s my way of showing gratitude and being thankful,
He’s a writer too,
similar to me,
or maybe I’m similar to Him,
because He’s 20 years my senior,
used to live the Hollywood Life,
made films and got famous,
and now He's a non profit doctor,
helping those in need that are nameless,
I see my future in his eyes,
so when we stop atop a dune,
at a bedouin camp with the three pyramids on the moon lit horizon,
I ask Him one question,
“Are you happy?”.
He pauses,
and He answers,
with something poetically metaphorical like,
“Happiness is relative.”
And then,
He proceeds to tell me the story of his life...
He talks about Hollywood,
He talks about love and about searching,
He talks about how he gave it all up,
to come to these deserts and help those that need helping,
He reveals so much,
so much more than any of these words can translate,
and as our evening comes to an end,
I realize as amazing as our lives may be we are only men,
alone,
atop a dune in Giza,
overlooking the Great Pyramids,
trying to share knowledge without sounding like preachers,
He is Jesus,
at least as close to Jesus as I’ve ever met,
quite fitting considering He came from The City of Angels,
and I see in His eyes that for society he has wept,
and I want to stay there,
because I love Him,
I see his struggle,
and His moral dilemmas,
but I've got a train to catch,
and life waits for no man,
so we wrap up our conversation,
and travel back across those Egyptian sands,
and it is then,
that I realize,
that He is me,
in 20 years time,
He is me,
in 20 years,
and as amazing as his ways seem,
I wonder if He’s lonely and if every effort he's ever made was worth it,
and that is why I asked Him what I now ask You,
“Are you happy?”.
∆ Aaron LA Lux ∆
As Time Slips Through The Sands of The Hourglass...