sexual compulsion, no longer doomed to walk nose–to–ground forever sniffing for pussy.
He lives much more in the higher places he`s always longed for. But his
manipulativeness—that`s still there, and so patent, and he`s so clueless about its
visibility, about how I should leap at his offer, how I should give him two hundred hours
of my time in return for his teaching me Schopenhauer, and brazenly presenting it as
though it was I who suggested it, who want and need it. Can`t deny that I have some
slight interest in Schopenhauer, but spending a couple hundred hours with Philip to learn
about Schopenhauer right now is low on my wish list. And if that excerpt he read about
the dying Buddenbrooks is a prime example of what Schopenhauer has to offer me, then it
leaves me cold. The idea of rejoining the universal oneness without any persistence of me
and my memories and unique consciousness is the coldest of comfort. No, it`s no comfort
at all.
And what draws Philip to me? That`s another question. That crack the other day
about the twenty thousand dollars he wasted on his therapy with me—maybe he is still
looking for some return on his investment.
Supervise Philip? Make him a legitimate, kosher therapist? There`s a dilemma. Do
I want to sponsor him? Do I want to give him my blessing when I don`t believe that a
hater (and heisa hater) can help anyone grow?
8
Halcyon Days
of Early
Childhood
_________________________
Religionhas everything on its
side: revelation, prophecies,
government protection, the
highest dignity and
eminence...and more than this,
the invaluable prerogative of
being allowed to imprint its
doctrines on the mind at a
tender age of childhood,
whereby they become almost
innate ideas.
_________________________
Johanna wrote in her diary that after Arthur`s birth in February 1788 she, like all young
mothers, enjoyed playing with her «new doll.» But new dolls soon become old dolls, and
within months Joanna wearied of her toy and languished in boredom and isolation in
Danzig. Something new was emerging in Johanna—some vague sense that motherhood
was not her true destiny, that some other future awaited her. Her summers at the
Schopenhauer country estate were particularly difficult. Though Heinrich, accompanied
by a clergyman, joined her for weekends, Johanna spent the rest of her time alone with
Arthur and her servants. Because of his fierce jealousy, Heinrich forbade his wife to
entertain neighbors or to venture from home for any reason.
When Arthur was five, the family encountered great stress. Prussia annexed
Danzig, and, shortly before the advancing Prussian troops arrived under the command of
the very general Heinrich had insulted years before, the entire Schopenhauer family fled
to Hamburg. There, in a strange city, Johanna gave birth to her second child, Adele, and
felt ever more trapped and despairing.
Heinrich, Johanna, Arthur, Adele—Father, mother, son, daughter—the four bound
together yet unconnected.
To Heinrich, Arthur was a chrysalis destined to emerge as the future head of the
Schopenhauer mercantile house. Heinrich was the traditional Schopenhauer father; he
attended to business and put his son out of mind, intending to spring into action and
assume fatherly duties when Arthur had finished his childhood.
And the wife, what was Heinrich`s plan for her? She was the Schopenhauer family
seedpod and cradle. Dangerously vital, she had to be contained, protected, and restrained.
And Johanna? What did she feel? Trapped! Her husband and provider, Heinrich,
was her lethal mistake, her joyless jailer, the grim evacuator of her vitality. And her son,
Arthur? Was he not part of the trap, the seal to her coffin? A talented woman, Johanna
had a desire for expression and self–realization that was growing at a ferocious pace, and
Arthur would prove a woefully inadequate recompense for self–renunciation.
And her young daughter? Little noticed by Heinrich, Adele was assigned a minor
role in the family drama and was destined to spend her entire life as Johanna
Schopenhauer`s amanuensis.
And so the Schopenhauers each went their separate ways.
Father Schopenhauer, heavy with anxiety and despair, lumbered to his death,
sixteen years after Arthur`s birth, by climbing to the upper freight window of the
Schopenhauer warehouse and leaping into the frigid waters of the Hamburg canal.
Mother Schopenhauer, sprung from her matrimonial trap by Heinrich`s leap,
kicked the grime of Hamburg from her shoes and flew like the wind to Weimar, where
she quickly created one of Germany`s liveliest literary salons. There she became the dear
friend of Goethe and other outstanding men of letters, and authored a dozen best–selling
romantic novels, many about women who were forced into unwanted marriages but
refused to bear children and continued to long for love.
And young Arthur? Arthur Schopenhauer was to grow up into one of the wisest
men who ever lived. And one of the most despairing and life–hating of men, a man who
at the age of fifty–five would write:
Could we foresee it, there are times when children might seem like innocent prisoners
condemned not to death but to life and as yet all too unconscious of what their
sentence means. Nevertheless every man desires to reach old age...a state of life of
which it may be said «it is bad today, and every day it will get worse, until the worst
of all happens.»
9
_________________________
Inendless space countless
luminous spheres, round each
of which some dozen smaller
illuminated ones revolve, hot
at the core and covered with a
cold hard crust on which a
mouldy film has produced
living and knowing beings—this
is...the real, the world.
_________________________
Julius`s spacious Pacific Heights home was far grander than any he could now possibly
afford to buy: he was one of the lucky millionaires in San Francisco who had the good
fortune to buy a house, any house, thirty years earlier. It was his wife, Miriam`s, thirty–thousand–dollar–inheritance money that had made the purchase possible, and, unlike any
other investment Julius and Miriam had ever made, the house`s value had rocketed
upward. After Miriam`s death, Julius considered selling the house—it was far too large
for one person—but instead he moved his office into the first floor of the house.
Four steps led from the street to a landing with a blue–tiled fountain. On the left, a
few stairs led to Julius`s office, on the right was a longer stairway to his home. Philip
arrived precisely on time. Julius greeted him at the door, escorted him into the office, and
gestured toward an auburn leather chair.
«Some coffee or tea?»
But Philip did not look around as he took his seat and, ignoring Julius`s offer, said,
«I await your decision about supervision.»
«Ah, once again, straight to the business at hand. I`ve having a difficult time with
that decision. Lots of questions. There`s something about your request—a deep
contradiction—that puzzles the hell out of me.»
«Undoubtedly, you want to know why I`m asking you for supervision after being
so dissatisfied with you as a therapist?»
«Precisely. In exceedingly clear language you claimed that our therapy was a
colossal failure, a waste of three years and a great deal of your money.»