Kafka in 1906

Franz Kafka, cerca 1906

 

Kafka’s not just one of my favorite writ­ers. He’s my friend. As in, on many a dicey occa­sion, the thought of his work, his life, his strug­gles, the obsta­cles he over­came, kept me trudg­ing through the mud. Interior cas­tles, tri­als beyond judg­ment, my own hunger artist period, my own sense of the hol­low .… It was as if he walked with me in my shoes, the shoes I bor­rowed from him. The shoes I then took off as I waited before the law, waited for the door­keeper to let me in to see for myself.

See what? I would shout back at Kafka, my rabbi. Why am I here, wait­ing to get through that door? See what? My des­tiny? My pun­ish­ment? My .… Yes, he would say. All of those things and none of them. Judgment is what you want, he would say. But you won’t rec­og­nize it when you see it, and you will mock it when you hear it.

Church at Auvers, by Vincent Van Gogh. 1890

The Church at Auvers, by Vincent Van Gogh. 1890. Musee d’Orsay, Paris.

 

I have long thought there was an implicit kin­ship between sev­eral poets, artists, musi­cians and philoso­phers. As if they could be grouped together, despite the sep­a­ra­tion of time and space. Linked. Connected.Their meta­phys­i­cal and metaphor­i­cal kin­ship bridged that dis­tance, and they crowd me now, crowd around me, telling me sto­ries, beg­ging me to open my eyes and ears to the world.

Starry Night over the Rhone by Vincent Van Gogh 1888

Starry Night Over the Rhone, by Vincent Van Gogh. 1888

 

In that pan­theon of life-​​advisers, of rab­bis, priests and coun­selors, Kafka sits with Kierkegaard, Rilke, Van Gogh, Camus, Flann O’Brien, and the Beatles. And it never really mat­tered, ulti­mately, that their own lives were often screwed up beyond all rea­son, or that they may have been cruel to their friends and loved-​​ones at times. As we all are. What really mat­ters is that their words, images and sounds could and did change the exter­nal and inter­nal world. What really mat­ters is that I get by with a lit­tle help – I get high with a lit­tle help from my pantheon.

 

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