30 October 2012

"Live your life in a way that doesn't make a mockery of your values."


Today, back from the Midwest U.S. after 6 months, driven with a new yet familiar awakening of a fluid letting go-ness, a natural familiarity with the revolution driving me, I stop in a public library to take shelter from the rain. While waiting for a computer, I read in the current issue of Rolling Stone (Nov. 8, 2012) the story of the federal prosecution of a young DIY hacktivist described by a close friend as a "modern day Abbie Hoffman." It's the story of Jeremy Hammond, and the article is called "Enemy of the State: The Rise and Fall of an American Revolutionary." Feeling the necessity now more than ever, the sense of urgency, to make every moment real and new, to remove myself from any inhibiting traces of past ideologies, I'm inspired by a quote from Bill Ayers, the former Weather Underground leader who influenced Hammond possibly while teaching at the University of Illinois--Chicago since Hammond was a student there at the same time. The quote originally appears in Ayers' memoir, Fugitive Days.
LIVE YOUR LIFE IN A WAY THAT DOESN'T MAKE A MOCKERY OF YOUR VALUES.
As I continue looking through the artifice, I take note of the signs, the messages, pushing themselves through my thick head until they register. This one will continue to be relevant, and I will try to maintain a consciousness of it.