Monday, January 2, 2017

In a Beginning

In a Beginning, because really we have no idea if this was the first time God woke up with an itch that needed scratching, a burning desire to create, a sort of Jackson Pollack moment where all the colors just had to be splashed on the canvas...In a Beginning, the energy of the infinite inhale became so concentrated, so intense, that God couldn't contain it another second (even though you understand, of course, that there were no seconds, there was no time or space before Creation).  With an enormous exhale, out came all that is and all that would be. It was dark, dark like a threatening, shadowy  back alley and suddenly gusty, that city wind that traps you in between tall buildings on a side street going west to the Hudson in January. Fierce and unwelcoming. But God said, to no one in particular, yehi or, let there be light and there was light. Unbelievable. Mind you, the light came out of nowhere, without a source. No moon, no sun, no stars. Just the really good idea of light, the idea of nurturing and growth. God saw that the light was good and decided to give it a name. After that, everything that seemed warm and open and childlike and white was called Day and everything that was sinister and hidden and mysterious and black was called Night. This caused a range of problems.

That seemed to be enough work for one day. On the second day, it became necessary to create the sky. You would think that would have come along right from the getgo, but apparently back in the day there was water everywhere kind of like after your pipes freeze and burst and it was necessary to form the sky as a way of separating the water below like Lake Superior and the Ganges from the water above, whatever that is. Now things were starting to take shape. So God called forth the Earth to form out of the water and imagined vegetation of all kinds growing on it, apricots and arugula, bamboo shoots and bok choy, watercress and avocadoes and Granny Smiths were created and God was like YES! because who doesn't like salad?

All this happened, mind you, without photosynthesis. Pretty amazing but maybe not sustainable in the long run. So, on the fourth day, God put lights in the sky because this was before iPhones with flashlights and it was really hard to see where you were going. So the lights, the sun and the moon, were created and with them the cycles of time. Weeks, months and years were set in place and provided a structure for nostalgia for the past and anxiety about the future which, as we shall see,  would soon become essential. On the fifth day, the whole project really started to pick up steam with cardinals and blackbirds appearing in the sky, trout and catfish swimming in the rivers. God was delighted, clapping the divine hands and jumping up and down on the divine feet. P'ru ur'vu, God shouted. Be fruitful and multiply. Have lots of avian and underwater sex...which isn't as easy as one might hope.

Seeing the potential fecundity of the animal kingdom, on the sixth day, God just went for it, just went all out, calling for cattle, creeping things and wild beasts of every kind. Imagine the first rhinos lumbering around, the first leopards stalking. Must have been a sight to behold. But there was something missing. What was it? You can imagine God pacing up and down, trying to come up with a Big Finish. Suddenly, a radical idea just popped into the divine mind. What if God were to create thinking beings called humans, made in the divine image, beings preoccupied with the past and the future, who were capable of feeling and problem solving and art making and put these exalted beings in charge of the whole show? What could possibly go wrong?

It could be that God had some misgivings, because just before deciding to give it a rest some last minute items were thrown into the cart, some afterthoughts that needed to be included before all activity stopped for the first shabbes. And one of those items was the rainbow which was designed to explain to humanity that light is made up of many colors and to make it clear that the sun will shine through the rainiest day and the dove of peace will survive the flood. And God saw all that God had made and found it pretty good, but with room for improvement. And there was evening and there was morning, the sixth day.


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17 comments:

Unknown said...

Wonderful, definitely accurate, description of creation with lots of room for improvement, not yr piece, but creation itself, especially the human part.

Susie Kaufman said...

You are definitely a First Responder. I wonder if God could have done better with more careful consideration of the pros and cons of creating humans in the divine image with all the potential for making poor choices?

Unknown said...

More! More! I love these pieces that you share, they move me to no end.
I was wondering who was "responsible" for all this around me, God, huh...sending love and light
always

Susie Kaufman said...

So great to hear from you! I'm on an every second Monday schedule which means I'll have to come up with two more pieces before I depart for Costa Rica. Last year, I had a lot of fun writing about a lizard when I was down there. Wishing you a glorious new year. May God in God's spare time bring you peace.

Unknown said...

I love it as it is both truth and joy and finally hopeful for us all living things both seen and unseen known and unknown

Susie Kaufman said...

I'm delighted that several people seem to be hearing joy in my new version of Genesis. I'm also very partial to things unseen and unknown. Thank you for writing.

movesound said...

So wonderful to read your delicious language and rhythm.
Love that you imagine more than one beginning.
Can envision animated version of this w/ rhinos lumbering and catfish swimming, narrated by you.
Thank you, Susie, for a fresh start filled with options for the new year - - -
JoAnne Spies

Susie Kaufman said...

Indeed....I wonder what became of the other beginnings. Maybe they're out there doing their thing while I'm watching the rain fall in Stockbridge. The animation idea is great and calls for a chat with Deb, don't you think? So much fun!

Jinks said...

Well, now! This is Susie, doing divine stand-up! Funny, colorful, imaginative, and ever hopeful. My favorite line is the final line of the 2nd last paragraph. Inspired!
Much love and all blessings for continued inspired creativity in 2017, dear friend. Jinks

Susie Kaufman said...

Divine stand-up is perfect. Thank you for that. Do you mean "what could go wrong?" Read the piece at my open mic last night beginning with a chant of the first line of Torah. Felt sort of holy.

Jinks said...

Yes, the notion that God creates humans and says "what could go wrong?" is nothing short of howlingly funny! How lovely that you got to read your beautiful piece.....

Peggy Reeves said...

I love salad and relish all the savory bits of your delicious writing.

Susie Kaufman said...

Peggy.....Pile up your plate. Always enough for seconds. Blessings in the new year...S

Unknown said...

Oh this is good, Susie...delicious. So what about all those fossily things? What are we to think??

Susie Kaufman said...

I've never had a problem swallowing science and spirit together. They investigate different layers of reality. Don't you think?

Unknown said...

I like that. I've been reading Evan S. Connell's essay "Olduvai and All That," about the beginnings of paleontology and what people made of these old bones ... Many of them worked so hard to keep these new discoveries in line with Biblical truth ... Even when it was obviously impossible.

Susie Kaufman said...

Must add that I hope you don't think my saying God did this and God did that represents my spiritual understanding of Creation. We have these stories and we have to tell them and tell them in a way they can be apprehended. So there's the level of science, the level of storytelling and the level of mystery. Maybe more.