I love tramping and skipping through Google. It always leads to such interesting things. One such thing was the midrash, a term I had never heard of before. I shan't go into a long explanation (for you can Google it yourselves!) but simply say that seems to use inspired storytelling to interpret older stories. I could be wrong.
Anyhoo, I found this one site that showed how to write a midrash yourself, and decided to give it a go. My piece is based on the following
exercise I found at http://www.reformjudaismmag.net/1199ao.html
"Imagine that you are Eve. You have just had
an interesting conversation with a talking serpent who insists that God doesn't
want you to eat the fruit of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil because
doing so would make you godlike. Observing the tree, you decide that the
attractive fruit must be good to eat and capable of making a person wise. You
reach forth your hand, take the fruit, and eat. What do you feel at that
moment? What are you thinking?"
*
I have bitten into the apple, and the first
thing I notice is how juicy it is. How intoxicatingly sweet. I have eaten many
fruit in this garden, but none like this. This beautiful, irresistible fruit.
Then I wonder: is it really more
delicious, more succulent? Or am I just attributing superior qualities to this fruit
in particular, simply because it was more beautiful? Or was I merely influenced
by the serpent’s opinion and so inclined to think that this fruit was somehow
better than all the others. Or does the thrill of doing something forbidden add
flavour to the experience?
Suddenly my head seems full and throbbing
with all these thoughts. Through their
clutter, the simplicity and clarity and sheer joy that once filled my mind can
no longer be found.
I drop the fruit with a sickening
realisation. It was not the tree that was special. There was no magic in its
fruit. It was I. My act, my choice to
reach out my hand, pluck the fruit and bite into it. It was just another tree
until I did that.
“What is this?” asks Adam, coming up behind
me.
“It is the Tree of the Knowledge of Good
and Evil,” I answer, without turning around. I do not tell him that it was a
tree like any other, until a few moments ago. My new knowledge weighs very
heavily in my heart, and I suddenly know that I do not want to be alone in
this. I pick up the fallen fruit and
brush the earth off it, against my bare belly.
The tingling, not-unpleasant sensation of wet, cool fruit against my
skin makes me uncomfortable. I turn
around, feeling shame for the second time in my life, and hold the fruit out to
him.
“Here,” I say. “Have a bite.”
2 comments:
I always love your stuff Nazu!
I love this!
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