Thursday, February 28, 2013

Day 59 - Redemption Story


Redemption Story
Matthew Ryan Fischer

What is the going rate for the human soul?  What is the spirit – that intangible life force within?  How do measure the untouchably unidentifiable?  There is no weight for the human soul, no matter what crude and inaccurate pseudo-science attempted to discern.  Certainly it is not twenty-one grams.  More likely that was the weight of air and odor leaving the body.  But even if it were the soul, how do you put a price on twenty-one grams worth of space within the body sack?  What if all the soul was was that twenty-one grams of space?  Who is to say what it does or does not do or mean?  No one on this planet knows the answer to that question, no matter what they may or may not believe.
The timeless ancient and forever question that the stories ask is for what price would a human sell their soul?  That is the fun in fiction, the lesson of the morality play, the tale of test and loss and corruption and redemption.  That is the stuff good fiction is made of.  But no one has yet been able to come along and ask for, purchase, barter or steal, that which is inside you, that which makes us all human.  There is possibly some spirit or entity that has such gifts, but certainly no human has figured that trick out yet.
Still though, the question remains along with the intrigue behind it.  For what price would you sell your soul?  The question asked consciously or unconsciously during every era of human existence.  What price for your soul?  What would you sell yourself for?  Love.  Revenge.  Power.  Everyone has their desires, base or noble or otherwise.   And a person has their breaking points whether they know it or not.  A man without hope is a man who will do most anything rotten in an attempt to try and get it back.
The fear is always the damnation that follows.  But no one knows.  There is always the question mark – what if you could get away with it?  Someone is always willing to try that gamble.

Ages ago the gods sat about and asked a similar theme.  They puzzled over what it would to take to ruin a man.  Many a game has been played in an attempt to determine this prize.  The histories of the world are full of the epic and many a myth telling the tales of the bored deities and the unsuspecting human.  Little did the ancient bards realize that was the lesser of the games played?
The question that vexed them more, that caused a rift and brought about so much chaos was when one of their own turned the tables and posed the same question, not about the humans of the earth, but of the gods of the sky. 
They looked about and smiled at each other in mocked protest.  Certainly one of their own could not want for anything.  They ruled the sky, created love and life and controlled the elements of the earth, water and sky.  They knew the secrets of life and death and the great beyond.  They had no wants and no needs.  They were immortals living in paradise. 
No one could answer the riddle of what it would take.  After a long silence immeasurable by man’s standards of time, the one who asked the question proposed a possible solution. 
“Whatever powers we believe we have, there is one that we all must respectfully bow to – the beginning and the end and the new beginning.  Everything must pass.  Even us.  There is only the one perfection in existence – the one constant that no one and nothing can escape.  The end.  Death.  Everything is finite, even we are finite.  That which can create and that which can destroy, that is the one and only true power in the universe.  Everything else in between is a mere shadow of the shimmering moment.”
He said that he would sell his immortal soul for the chance to be perfection for that one glorious time moment. 
It was true that these gods were masters over space and time, but they were also all subject to the master that was the beginning and the end.  No one yet knew a way to outsmart these two outcomes.
“Certainly not into eternal damnation,” cried some of the others. 
“Most certainly indeed,” replied the loner.  
That day the gods departed with a worried feeling in whatever passed as their stomachs.  One of their own was independent, irrational, and inconceivable.  This was a mighty big worry indeed.  So with humbled pride they resolved to the answer within perfection, within that which could create or destroy, within that which was the beginning and the end.
This simple act of reflecting upon that which had made them so uneasy, made them feel instantly better.  The warmth that came from supposedly addressing and challenging one’s fears, even if no solution is discovered, overwhelmed them all.  They once again had faith and an assurance in their place in the universe.  They knew that whatever had been askew would be corrected.
The test of the soul was given. 
The gods watched as the universe was reshaped.
But the loner turned and watched the power to begin and end. 
With that he watched perfection and learned the secret of such a moment.  With that he sealed his fate.
A bang or a whimper or a light or darkness.  None of it mattered.  There was beauty in knowing.  The others would never have love or knowledge or perfection.  They would have fear and the feigned arrogance that they had some control over anything.
There was only one power, and it was not theirs.
When asked once again, ages later, if he would do it all again and be tempted, the loner responded ‘Most assuredly so’.

No comments:

Post a Comment