![]() |
Ratten im Kopf - Rats in Head
Dieser Tage kreuzte
eine Ratte meinen Weg. Ohne zu zögern tauchte sie auf aus den tintendunklen
Morgenschatten und verschwand bereits wieder am Rand des Lichtkegels der
Straßenlaterne, als ich sie bemerkte. Offenbar war eines der Kellerfenster da
drüben ihr Ziel. Bis zum Ende der Woche hatte ich die kurze Begegnung schon
lange wieder vergessen. Bis die Ratten spürbar genagt hatten.
Manchmal sind wir am Ende der Woche tatsächlich am Ende. Manchmal nagen die Ratten im Gemüt,
schlagen scharfe Zähne in die Substanz. Aufgrund ihrer sozialen Eigenschaften
und dem damit einhergehenden Instinkt, tauchen die Nager meist in Gruppen auf.
Wenn es nagt im Hirn, ist es selten nur ein Tier. Die Beute wird zerlegt
mit der dazugehörigen Effizienz, Gegenwehr zwecklos.
Die Anforderungen
des Alltags fühlen sich gelegentlich an wie im Hirn nagende Rattenzähne.
Manchmal scheinen sie das Erleben einfach in Form zu bringen, nagen das
Überflüssige weg vom wuchernden Fleisch dessen, was sich uns aufdrängt. Sie
beseitigen Müll, kümmern sich um Überflüssiges (oder Überfluss?) und lassen
anderes zurück. Gelegentlich aber laden wir sie ein zu einem Festmahl an der
Substanz. Immer dann können wir erkennen, dass es nicht das Geschehen selbst
ist das nagt, sondern unsere Reaktion darauf.
Wie das Pendel an
einem Uhrwerk schwingen wir uns durch den Tag. Auf und Ab. Unablässig tickt die
Uhr. Mal schwingen wir im Rhythmus dazu mit, klopfen den Takt mit der
Fußspitze. Mal ignorieren wir die Geräusche, geben uns ganz uns selbst hin.
Dann wieder empfinden wir sie als störend, lehnen uns auf dagegen, dass Fremdes
den Ton angibt, dass wir nicht unsere Ruhe haben.
Dann kommen die
Ratten.
Wie mit einem
Rattengebiss nagt der Zahn der Zeit, obwohl diese wohl eher ein zahnloser Greis
ist, der an seinem Brei mümmelt. Mehr bleibt nicht übrig für den gefräßigen
Ewig-Alten, nachdem das Leben uns mitgespielt hat. Wohl oder übel, wie es das
tut.
Nicht mitspielen
heißt, sich wehren. Doch es weiß das Ende bereits am Anfang: "Gegenwehr
zwecklos." Weigern und Verweigern kosten nicht nur Energie. Sie rauben
sie. Dazu ist sie zu schade. Wenn wir nicht gegen die Ratten kämpfen, verlieren sie ihren Biss. Es ist eigenartig und klingt paradox. Dennoch ist es genauso.
Ich kann meine
Aufmerksamkeit auf die Ratten richten, die auftauchen aus den Schatten, ebenso
flüchtig wie ihr Ursprung. Da sind aber auch die anderen Dinge, denen ich mich
zuwenden kann, sei es auch nur für einen flüchtigen Blick. Eine Amsel huscht
vorbei, den Kopf gesenkt als wäre sie auf der Jagd. Da blühen Blümchen im
Schatten, die im ersten Sonnenlicht anfangen werden zu leuchten und ganz
zaghaft taucht irgendwo hinter dem Horizont das erste Tageslicht auf.
Durchatmen und
erinnern, wenn es trübe ist: Mit geschlossenen Augen scheint immer die Sonne, wenn wir wollen. Das ist keine Realitätsflucht. Realität ist das, woran wir uns
erinnern und es damit aufrecht erhalten. Seien es nun Ratten im Kopf, der
mitreißende Takt des Lebens oder die Sonne im Gesicht.
-->These days, a rat crossed my path. Without hesitation she emerged from the dark morning shadows and disappeared again at the edge of the light cone of the street lamp when I noticed her. Apparently one of the basement windows over there was her target. By the end of the week I had long forgotten this brief encounter. Until the rats had noticeably gnawed.
Sometimes we are actually at the end of ourseves when the week ends. Sometimes the rats gnaw in the mind, beat sharp teeth into the substance. Because of their social characteristics and the instinct that goes with them, the rodents usually appear in groups. When it gnaws in the brain, it is rarely just an animal. The prey is decomposed with the corresponding efficiency, resistance futile.
The demands of everyday life occasionally feel like gnawing rat teeth in the brain. Sometimes they seem to simply bring the experience into shape, gnaw away the superfluous from the proliferating flesh of what imposes itself on us. They remove garbage, take care of the superfluous (or abundance?) and leave other things behind. Occasionally, however, we invite them to a feast on the substance. Always then we can see that it is not the event itself that gnaws, but our reaction to it.
Like the pendulum on a clockwork, we swing through the day. Up and down. The clock is ticking relentlessly. Sometimes we resonate to the rhythm, knocking the beat with the tip of our feet. Sometimes we ignore the sounds, give ourselves completely to ourselves. Then again we find them disturbing, leaning against the fact that something foreign sets the tone, that we do not have our peace.
Then the rats come.
The ravages of time gnaw like a rat's bite, although it is probably a toothless old man who mums up on his pulp. There is nothing more left for the voracious eternal old man after life has played along with us. Good or bad, as it does.
Not to play along means to defend oneself. But it knows the end already at the beginning: "Resistance futile". Refusing and refusing do not only cost energy. They rob it. It is too good for that. If we don't fight the rats, they lose their bite. It is strange and sounds paradoxical. Yet it is like this.
I can focus my attention on the rats that emerge from the shadows, as fleeting as their origin. But there are the other things I can turn to, even for a glimpse. A blackbird scurries by, its head lowered as if it were hunting. There blossom little flowers in the shade, which will begin to glow in the first sunlight and somewhere behind the horizon the first daylight emerges quite timidly.
Take a deep breath and remember when it is cloudy: with closed eyes the sun always shines when we want. This is not a flight from reality. Reality is what we remember and thus maintain. Be it rats in the head, the rousing beat of life or the sun in the face.<--
-->These days, a rat crossed my path. Without hesitation she emerged from the dark morning shadows and disappeared again at the edge of the light cone of the street lamp when I noticed her. Apparently one of the basement windows over there was her target. By the end of the week I had long forgotten this brief encounter. Until the rats had noticeably gnawed.
Sometimes we are actually at the end of ourseves when the week ends. Sometimes the rats gnaw in the mind, beat sharp teeth into the substance. Because of their social characteristics and the instinct that goes with them, the rodents usually appear in groups. When it gnaws in the brain, it is rarely just an animal. The prey is decomposed with the corresponding efficiency, resistance futile.
The demands of everyday life occasionally feel like gnawing rat teeth in the brain. Sometimes they seem to simply bring the experience into shape, gnaw away the superfluous from the proliferating flesh of what imposes itself on us. They remove garbage, take care of the superfluous (or abundance?) and leave other things behind. Occasionally, however, we invite them to a feast on the substance. Always then we can see that it is not the event itself that gnaws, but our reaction to it.
Like the pendulum on a clockwork, we swing through the day. Up and down. The clock is ticking relentlessly. Sometimes we resonate to the rhythm, knocking the beat with the tip of our feet. Sometimes we ignore the sounds, give ourselves completely to ourselves. Then again we find them disturbing, leaning against the fact that something foreign sets the tone, that we do not have our peace.
Then the rats come.
The ravages of time gnaw like a rat's bite, although it is probably a toothless old man who mums up on his pulp. There is nothing more left for the voracious eternal old man after life has played along with us. Good or bad, as it does.
Not to play along means to defend oneself. But it knows the end already at the beginning: "Resistance futile". Refusing and refusing do not only cost energy. They rob it. It is too good for that. If we don't fight the rats, they lose their bite. It is strange and sounds paradoxical. Yet it is like this.
I can focus my attention on the rats that emerge from the shadows, as fleeting as their origin. But there are the other things I can turn to, even for a glimpse. A blackbird scurries by, its head lowered as if it were hunting. There blossom little flowers in the shade, which will begin to glow in the first sunlight and somewhere behind the horizon the first daylight emerges quite timidly.
Take a deep breath and remember when it is cloudy: with closed eyes the sun always shines when we want. This is not a flight from reality. Reality is what we remember and thus maintain. Be it rats in the head, the rousing beat of life or the sun in the face.<--

Keine Kommentare:
Kommentar veröffentlichen