Hi

Opening paragraph. "Lila didn't know he was here." This sums up how Phaedrus 
has viewed Lila his whole life, for he has known her before.
What Phaedrus is seeing in Lila is really like an opposition inside himself; 
what Carl Jung called the 'anima'. Its his own lost youth staring back at 
him "softly cherubic, like a small girl." A girl that he saw a couple times 
on a streetcar, later at a beach. But not really the same girl at all. 
Rather, it's lila. That's who he recognizes. This Lila's eyes will not be 
sparkling when she wakes.

People and places we grow up with stay the same in our eyes, have you 
noticed? It's like we build an image of that person and place and that image 
changes along with our own image so that those all important relationships 
between people and places evolve simultaneously. We don't notice those 
little day to day changes like we do when we are apart from people and 
places for many, many years. Still, there is something...

There is something much deeper at work here -- something we all can identify 
with. There is somewhere a sameness that transcends the tempory changes... 
Lila's Quality, if you will. "He would like to know her better." So, right 
off, I sense that Phaedrus is lost. For even though he believes that he 
already knows Lila, he wants to know more. He can't get to know her better 
though, for "there was not much time." The coming of winter... "the cold 
breeze..." coincides with the sadness of inevitable changes, of the constant 
cycle of birth and death. "There was not much time." This is stressed over 
and over.

It was autumn when Phaedrus remembered seeing Lila, too. Thinking of that 
brings that moment to reality as if it never passed. There is a Dynamic 
resonance going on constantly between the time we perceive as flowing (the 
river) and the "time" that is no time at all, the forgetfulness of the 
ocean. Phaedrus remembers everything about that day "so long ago -- years 
and years ago" as if it happened just now. But the ocean is confusing when 
first encountered, like Phaedrus' first experience going through the locks.

"This sleeping Lila" turned up again and again to Phaedrus back then, and 
here she is again, somehow... somehow different and yet not having changed 
at all. Phaedrus has grown into his nose and being a Great Author further 
bolsters his esteem. Still he doubts whether to talk to her or not. But now 
he sees her as a fallen Lila, in a sense. Now Lila is approachable, and 
more, Phaedrus actually believes he can get to know her better! What else 
can she do but let him down?

The way Phaedrus thinks of himself is his projection of Lila. How he creates 
her. As ugly and lost as Phaedrus once felt inside, now Lila feels to him. 
And as beautiful and full of promise Lila once felt to him, now Phaedrus 
feels inside. Phaedrus sees Lila as oppositional to his own self, or rather 
"call her lila". The Great Wheel turns slowly yet it is always turning. This 
center that we all seek reveals itself in oppositions but only if we are 
open to the whole. Otherwise there is no space for understanding.

Speaking of space, Rigel and Capella are a pair of bar buddies who Phaedrus 
meets while waiting for the canal to be cleared of hurricane debris. " 'I 
think it's space that does it,' he'd said to Rigel." Now, I  find it 
fascinating that Rigel and Capella are two stars of seven that make up the 
asterism of the 'Heavenly G'. (An asterism is a subset or superset of stars 
which builds on the constellations themselves, like the Big Dipper as part 
of the Great Bear.) Hmmm. Being a sailor, Pirsig must have been very 
familiar with the night sky, so I doubt this was some kind of cosmic 
accident. The Heavenly G for Good... what do you think?

In Lila, Rigel is a morally uptight lawyer who tells Phaedrus that once you 
know a place, there is no space for understanding. For you realize not just 
this place, but every place is "full of old secrets." And Rigel knows Lila. 
So does Phaedrus, though not in the same way. Phaedrus knows her through 
bare glimpses and half remembered places. This is a much deeper kind of 
knowing, a Dynamic ever present knowing, if you will. The superficial social 
knowing of Rigel pales in comparision. The knowing of her dark secrets 
reveals his ignorance at ever understanding who and what Lila really is.

For the most part, Capella seems mostly a foil for Rigel's sermons. Someone 
easily impressed by the lawyer's rhetoric. There is something as easy and 
unassuming about Capella as there is something Victorian and rigidly moral 
about Rigel so he makes easy prey. But this easy, unassuming way will never 
be changed by Rigel's moralistic rantings and ravings. And both Rigel and 
Capella are stars of the first magnitude...this means something.

In summing up Chapter 1, there is a sense of impending doom building on the 
horizon, all around Phaedrus. But a sense of impending renewal too. "It 
doesn't make any sense at all." Despite the moralistic overtones of Rigel, 
Phaedrus wakes to find Lila sleeping fitfully next to him. Because her eyes 
held a timeless glint in them for one brief instant. "Where have I seen you 
before?" she had asked him in the bar the night before. She's noticed him 
too! They are drawn together for this journey and we are invited along for 
the ride.

Thanks for reading

Cory












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