One of the coolest things for a person to experience is the feeling of stepping outside oneself in a purely transcendental moment.
As of today it has happened to me twice, and fittingly with both of my great loves. The first time was my senior year in high school. It was one of the last baseball games of that season. We were getting killed by a team that we had never lost too in 4 years of games. Needless to say it was not a fun day, but about the 5th or 6th inning I was coming to bat for the 3rd time that game and I suddenly knew that I was going to hit a home run. I can't explain it but I truly knew balls to bones that I would be going yard on the very first pitch of that at bat. Sure enough the first pitch I crushed the ball about 360 feet over the center field fence and rounded the bases.
The funny thing is that it was almost like I was watching myself do it. It was unbelievable, and a feeling that I never thought that I would have again.
Then this past Thursday came along. As many 0f you may know I am currently involved in my second great love, a theatrical endeavor known as Neil Simon's The Odd Couple. While on stage last week, I was reciting my lines when I realized that I was consciously aware of how natural they sounded. It was like my brain had split into two camps. The side that needed to focus on my lines was parked in auto-pilot allowing my analytical side to evaluate my performance. It was scary cool. Again the only way that I can describe it was like stepping out of myself to watch my performance from the audience as an audience member.
If you have never felt this sensation I highly recommend it. There is nothing out there as far as sensation goes to compare.
Til' we meet again
Paul.
1 comment:
I haven't felt that way in a long time. Mine will come from usual everyday activities. It's like déjà vu. The most recent dealt with the way I eat a peanut butter sandwich. I was telling Rob about it and I swear we already had the conversation. I broke it by laughing at the deja vu-ness of it.
I'm happy to hear it happen while you were performing. I was just talking about you and that you're actually doing what you want to do.
Post a Comment