************************************************************************ The following first appeared in the private email list IVy-subscribers, which is available to all those who subscribe to the printed magazine, International Viewpoints. ************************************************************************ The Odyssey and the Idiot by Phil Spickler 7 Sept 99 Hello, anyone -- anyone at all. Here's a story that I hope you won't find too tall. Julie (that's my companion and better half) and I have been conducting for the past year or so a survey throughout the Americas of any and all mountain traps -- in fact, we've been looking for and examining traps in general; and as you can well imagine this has been truly a fantastic voyage. Traps, so we are told, and what they can do, are said to be very old in origin, and seem to have been very useful to all sorts of intelligences throughout the trillennia. Now of course a trap that's worth its name is designed or made, usually, to trap something, to capture it, usually by surprise. And once it gets hold of the thing, whether it's a mousetrap or a lobster trap, or (dare I say) a theta trap, whatever's trapped usually can't get away from the trap, and is held there until the trapper comes along and completes the job of doing whatever it's going to do with that which it has trapped. Once something gets trapped, it often fights and struggles and goes through all kinds of things in an attempt to escape the trap. Some animals have been known to chew off an arm or a leg to escape the trap, and sometimes lose their lives in so doing. But there's a wide, wide range of traps that are designed by trappers to capture all sorts of trappees, and most folks seem to have almost an innate sense of what traps are and what they're all about and how they're used. When you design something that's supposed to trap or entrap very clever or very intelligent whatevers, you've got to really put your mind and inventiveness to the wheel, so to speak, in order to make something that won't easily be spotted as a trap, since obviously, if any of us, including my dear readers, are able to spot a trap before we get caught by it, we'll usually say something like, "Hmm! There's a trap! I think I'll just avoid that. Or maybe I'll surround it by a more clever trap and when the trapper comes to find out if there's anything in his or her trap, I'll trap the trapper." And so on and so forth. There's some that do declare that that's all that Life is really about, is getting in and out of traps. You could say that all that Buddhism ever was or will be is a manual to de-entrap, dis-entrap, oneself and others. You could say that, but don't, because it will probably anger hard-core Buddhists to simplify their 850 million canons (all written in Pali), supposedly attributed to a guy that said, "Please don't pay attention to anything I ever said." Anyway, what I'm trying to say is, don't get the Buddhists mad at you. Well, I could go on and on about traps, and don't forget, before we leave this topic, that people themselves sometimes mock themselves up (I know this won't come as a surprise to you all) as traps. Hubbard used to say, "The best approach to a trap, either as a high-toned human being or as an immortal, is just to jump feet-first into the darned thing and enjoy it! But definitely don't get into the habit of using your own energy to entrap yourself further, since that's the most enduring trap of all." Anyway, my partner and I were on our trap pilgrimage, and we found ourselves high in the Altiplano (that's the high plains for those of you that don't speak Latin), surrounded by even higher and very forbidding mountains. We had also, through a navigational error, run out of food and water, and were surrounded by one of the most hostile tribes of Native Americans I ever hope to see outside of the Lower East Side of New York City. Anyhow, shivering with cold and trying to look friendly ourselves, with what looked like a grim future soon to happen, my eye was caught by a movement in the sky as a large condor (that's a vulture with a 12' wingspan) came soaring overhead, giving off that terrifying cry that heralds its passage, and I could see it was looking right at me, as if to say, "You'll soon be dead meat, and I'll be there to enjoy you." But at that moment, something fluttered from between its claws, went through a series of very interesting maneuvers, and as I reached up my hand it came close enough for me to grasp it; and by gum, by golly, you'll never believe what this was. Yes, it was a copy of IVy 43, and what I have found in this amazing periodical saved the day and saved our lives, thus making this journal possible. First thing we did was use the information on 2-way communication by Frank Gordon to get into such great communication with these hostile tribespeople that soon we had been invited to the warmth of their shelter and were being fed a good hot meal and had a chance to dry our wet clothing, and even though we didn't speak what could be called the same language, we managed to create and maintain good 2-way comm with these folks, and it got going so well that a few of them may show up in Dallas in the not-too-distant future. Other articles in this wonderful issue of IVy that helped us out in further travels are as follows: Otto Roos's article made it possible for us to assume false identities, thus escaping from some of the worst possibilities that were intended in our direction by unnamed pursuers; with the help of Ken Urquhart's masterpiece we were able to get pretty serious about Truth and Falsehood, thus avoiding any further interactions with groups like the Explorers' Club, or should I say the Liars' Club; with the help of Pam Kemp's article on love and its power in this world and other universes, we enjoyed the company and help of many ordinary and magnificent people throughout our travels. But of course the ultimate bellyful from the magnificent journal called IVy was the giant meal to be found in the bill of the Pelican, which as you know holds more than its belly can. That article left me speechless, and as you know that's saying a mouthful. It also said everything I ever hoped to say, only better, and may cause my early retirement from these hallowed pages and this list (just kidding). And so in conclusion I'd just like to say that aside from being the greatest bargain in reading material to be found on Planet Earth at this time, as you can see, the information contained in the pages of this and many earlier editions could save your life and entertain you at the same time. All the very best to those who ________ -- Phil (and Julie too)