I
I’m going to quit smoking tomorrow. Today I’m driving north along the river to the Quick Stop to get my last pack of cigarettes. The surface of the water looks like a king’s highway strewn with yellow petals and the vegetation is lush from a month of rain and the sun feels the way it might feel to someone who’s been held for years in a stone dungeon. I’m going to quit smoking because I want to live; I want to feel that sun again and again; I want to take deep breaths, and I don’t want to hack up brown phlegm. I’m quitting because I’ve begun to admire my body for the many things it does for me: the wheelbarrows of dirt it moves, the rocks it carries, the plants it pulls up and puts down. And I admire it for the mind it carries atop it, though the mind has so often treated the body like a poor relation. Like a faithful friend, the body went on hoping the mind would come to its senses. And it did, finally. And, lo and behold, there was still a body, a strong body there to do the work of life. And so I discovered God was not in my mind, but had been hidden in my body all along. God was in the cells that healed themselves, and in the neurons and in the muscles, the heart, especially the heart, that beat and beat though not instructed to do so, that beats now without prayers or offerings, through every sin and misgiving. Because I was driving, I could not fall on my knees in front of my body, but I could turn the car around and go home.
II
And there is more. As I was driving home I saw a child’s black rubber boot lying on its side in the road. And instead of just letting it be what it was, I suddenly imagined the road full of people carrying their belongings on their backs, hurrying, hurrying, their children struggling to keep up, and one sickly boy finally falling down and wailing that he couldn’t go on. And I saw his father throw down his pack and snatch his son up though he knew this might mean his own death, because leaving his son meant another kind of death, and as he held him one boot worked loose because it was too big anyway, and it dropped to the road and no one noticed, or no one wanted one boot as they surged on toward some mythical border where they’d be safe. And I knew I was an antenna picking up some bit of bad news from across the globe and whether it was good or bad I had to be there for it. So when I thought of turning around again to get the cigarettes — because what was one more day of inhaling that shit into my lungs? — I thought of that little boot and how one day is forever sometimes. And I remember that boot now every time I want to smoke, and every time it breaks my heart, the heart that beats on and on even when I think it’s broken.