Sunday, December 5, 2010

trusting time...


simple message today..."hokey wisdom" from my mother, who told me about this:

a poster in her former therapist's office; it pictured the grand canyon and simply said across the image:

THINGS
TAKE
TIME

t-cubed.

take a deep breath, and trust the process-- there's evidence all around me, particularly today at tent rocks national monument near cochiti, that this is true truth. i only have to trust...

Saturday, December 4, 2010

reigniting the flame ["...not filling a bucket but lighting a fire"]


phoenix-like [although with decidedly less acute drama...:)]i've come back to this project.

in brief, the context of my writing has changed-- new landscapes-- natural & social & emotional...back in the land of enchantment, & challenged & fulfilled by a job that feels purposeful and meaningful, i am beginning a new chapter....
i am now teaching english writing and literature at a fabulous all-girls middle school...and in addition to bringing energy and getting energy back from my work, i am hoping to sustain and explore my fascination with language and the wonder with which poets and writers of all genres articulate the world through this blog once again, for myself if for no one else.

so here's an invocation by rumi to welcome in the new season.

by rumi

[the time has come...]
the time has come
to break all my promises
tear apart all chains
and cast away all advice
disassemble the heavens
link by link
and break at once
all lovers' ties
with the sword of death
put cotton inside
both my ears
and close them to
all words of wisdom
crash the door and
enter the chamber
where all sweet
things are hidden
how long can i
beg and bargain
for the things of this world
while love is waiting
how long before
i can rise beyond
how i am and
what i am


!

Saturday, July 31, 2010

falling in LOVE with a familiar-new city



a favorite poem of mine-- en francais here....translates to

"my heart like an upside-down flame"


~
seemed appropriate.

biking around philly with anam yesterday-- my eyes were peeled back fully and my heart opened entirely to this city on the most perfect of summer afternoons...




lucky, my nearly-native (she's been there for five years so that's good enough for me) clearly is far to sophisticated to carry a camera with her here, but it was lucky for us that geeky tourist girl greta decided to bring her own so we could capture some of that LOVE!


Tuesday, July 27, 2010

salt & sea air! [a day at the shore]

on a trip to the shore today, i learned two things:

1. courtesy of ian, my certainty that the atlantic is INDEED muchmuch saltier than the pacific was confirmed, scientifically! here's the cementing proof :)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantic_Ocean


2. grasshoppers enjoy a mid-day float! well, this one had decided it would be an interesting activity to try...i rescued him, and ian christened him CORNELIUS! when i scooped him from the water, him became very attached, and proceeded to dry himself, most adorably wiping the water from his head and antenae with is teenie, tiny feet! wish i could have captured THIS! but, at least i have a lovely photo of the two of us, just before his release into the wild freedom of the avon beach...

Monday, July 26, 2010

poetry for times like these...

[what is the role of the poet in a modern world, one in which you can't ignore what happens in its farthest reaches because it appears in your morning mailbox and steals so many special someones from "safety"-- which itself turns into an illusion...?


ferlinghetti seems to think the role is a major one, and calls to the poets here...]



Poetry as Insurgent Art [I am signaling you through the flames]
by Lawrence Ferlinghetti

I am signaling you through the flames.

The North Pole is not where it used to be.

Manifest Destiny is no longer manifest.

Civilization self-destructs.

Nemesis is knocking at the door.

What are poets for, in such an age?
What is the use of poetry?

The state of the world calls out for poetry to save it.

If you would be a poet, create works capable of answering the challenge of apocalyptic times, even if this meaning sounds apocalyptic.

You are Whitman, you are Poe, you are Mark Twain, you are Emily Dickinson and Edna St. Vincent Millay, you are Neruda and Mayakovsky and Pasolini, you are an American or a non-American, you can conquer the conquerors with words....


[is this possible? i would like to hope so...but perhaps it's at least a means of processing, of taking action and ownership, of feeling less like this is all something that is happening TO you...there IS power in speaking, and in writing, back to that which screams at us, violates us, seeks to destroy us...

because WORDS are our uniquely human gift.]

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

fruit, & childhood reconsidered...





being home is sending me into a regression into childhood memories and dredging up emotions that i didn't know lingered...as a result, i've been reading a lot of pieces and thinking about these moments in time, suspended, and then also the meta-moments when the recognition of its passage cuts deeply..

li-young lee is a poet to whom i was introduced in college-- his poem "persimmons" was on my mind this morning, perhaps because of the fruit-bounty, photos of which i've included in this post, that we've harvested from our single sprawling peach tree...and certainly because of the way in which lee meditations, certainly, upon culture and racial tensions, but also, upon relationships between parents and children, upon growing up, upon loss, upon change, upon love...

Persimmons

BY LI-YOUNG LEE

In sixth grade Mrs. Walker
slapped the back of my head
and made me stand in the corner
for not knowing the difference
between persimmon and precision.
How to choose

persimmons. This is precision.
Ripe ones are soft and brown-spotted.
Sniff the bottoms. The sweet one
will be fragrant. How to eat:
put the knife away, lay down newspaper.
Peel the skin tenderly, not to tear the meat.
Chew the skin, suck it,
and swallow. Now, eat
the meat of the fruit,
so sweet,
all of it, to the heart.

Donna undresses, her stomach is white.
In the yard, dewy and shivering
with crickets, we lie naked,
face-up, face-down.
I teach her Chinese.
Crickets: chiu chiu. Dew: I’ve forgotten.
Naked: I’ve forgotten.
Ni, wo: you and me.
I part her legs,
remember to tell her
she is beautiful as the moon.

Other words
that got me into trouble were
fight and fright, wren and yarn.
Fight was what I did when I was frightened,
Fright was what I felt when I was fighting.
Wrens are small, plain birds,
yarn is what one knits with.
Wrens are soft as yarn.
My mother made birds out of yarn.
I loved to watch her tie the stuff;
a bird, a rabbit, a wee man.

Mrs. Walker brought a persimmon to class
and cut it up
so everyone could taste
a Chinese apple. Knowing
it wasn’t ripe or sweet, I didn’t eat
but watched the other faces.

My mother said every persimmon has a sun
inside, something golden, glowing,
warm as my face.

Once, in the cellar, I found two wrapped in newspaper,
forgotten and not yet ripe.
I took them and set both on my bedroom windowsill,
where each morning a cardinal
sang, The sun, the sun.

Finally understanding
he was going blind,
my father sat up all one night
waiting for a song, a ghost.
I gave him the persimmons,
swelled, heavy as sadness,
and sweet as love.

This year, in the muddy lighting
of my parents’ cellar, I rummage, looking
for something I lost.
My father sits on the tired, wooden stairs,
black cane between his knees,
hand over hand, gripping the handle.
He’s so happy that I’ve come home.
I ask how his eyes are, a stupid question.
All gone, he answers.

Under some blankets, I find a box.
Inside the box I find three scrolls.
I sit beside him and untie
three paintings by my father:
Hibiscus leaf and a white flower.
Two cats preening.
Two persimmons, so full they want to drop from the cloth.

He raises both hands to touch the cloth,
asks, Which is this?

This is persimmons, Father.

Oh, the feel of the wolftail on the silk,
the strength, the tense
precision in the wrist.
I painted them hundreds of times
eyes closed. These I painted blind.
Some things never leave a person:
scent of the hair of one you love,
the texture of persimmons,
in your palm, the ripe weight.


lee makes love and memory tangible here...captures it in the flesh of a fruit, in the "precision" of the painting of a blind old man, in the gift from father to son...


i found this poem by lee that i hadn't before encountered...it pulls equally at the heart, but ends on a note that rings a bit more minor...

i'm intrigued by the play with the word "time" in this poem, especially, and about the insights and illuminations that take place in the in-between spaces of that time...all unfolding as they seem to have been meant to...in order to grow up, in order to become "one," alone...

Secret Life

BY LI-YOUNG LEE

Alone with time, he waits for his parents to wake,
a boy growing old at the dining room table,

pressing into the pages of one of his father's big books
the flowers he picked all morning

in his mother's garden, magnolia, hibiscus,
azalea, peony, pear, tulip, iris;

reading in another book their names he knows,
and then the names from their secret lives;

lives alchemical, nautical, genital;
names unpronounceable fascicles of italic script;

secrets botanical
description could never trace:

accessory to empire, party to delusions of an afterlife,
kin to the toothed, mouthed, furred,

horned, brained. Flowers
seem to a boy, who doesn't know better, like the winged,

the walking, the swimming and crawling things abstracted
from time, and stilled by inward gazing.


Copying their pictures, replete with diagrams, he finds
in the words for their parts,

the accounts of their histories,
and their scattered pollen,

something to do with his own fate
and the perfection of all dying things.

And when it's time, he discovers in the kitchen
the note left for him that says

his parents have gone and will return by noon.
And when it's time, the dove

calls from its hiding place
and leaves the morning greener

and the one who hears the dove more alone.

so the morning is greener...because of the dove? because of what the one who hears the dove has learned? because the one who hears the dove is more alone [the echo of the word that began the poem]?

maybe, then, greener mornings can move into the present moment and not just live in a past made rosy by memories of how things were...because, goodness knows, we cannot go back from "alone," but at least we're together in the "aloneness" because it's happened, or will happen, to each of us...



[delicious ripe peaches from the fernwood garden...plus, fernwood HONEY and basil too! what a harvest!]

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

talking to the sun


last night, i had dinner with a dear mentor and friend from rutgers...a gorgeous summer evening with warm breezes and a crescent moon crescendoing periodically into luminosity between ghosts of clouds whispering past...we talked for a handful of hours, catching up on the past, coloring in the lines of the present, and imagining possibilities for the future...one of these "futures" touched upon the essential ingredients for the ideal living locale...and fire island came up, on his end, as a musing maybe...

because i've been thinking about this, and as a result my mind jumps immediately to o'hara's poem [below] i've decided to share this today...a meditation on nature, on time, on purpose, and on the work and craft of the poet...



A True Account of Talking to the Sun on Fire Island

by Frank O'Hara

The Sun woke me this morning loud
and clear, saying "Hey! I've been
trying to wake you up for fifteen
minutes. Don't be so rude, you are
only the second poet I've ever chosen
to speak to personally

so why
aren't you more attentive? If I could
burn you through the window I would
to wake you up. I can't hang around
here all day."

"Sorry, Sun, I stayed
up late last night talking to Hal."

"When I woke up Mayakovsky he was
a lot more prompt" the Sun said
petulantly. "Most people are up
already waiting to see if I'm going
to put in an appearance."

I tried
to apologize "I missed you yesterday."
"That's better" he said. "I didn't
know you'd come out." "You may be
wondering why I've come so close?"
"Yes" I said beginning to feel hot
wondering if maybe he wasn't burning me
anyway.

"Frankly I wanted to tell you
I like your poetry. I see a lot
on my rounds and you're okay. You may
not be the greatest thing on earth, but
you're different. Now, I've heard some
say you're crazy, they being excessively
calm themselves to my mind, and other
crazy poets think that you're a boring
reactionary. Not me.

Just keep on
like I do and pay no attention. You'll
find that people always will complain
about the atmosphere, either too hot
or too cold too bright or too dark, days
too short or too long.

If you don't appear
at all one day they think you're lazy
or dead. Just keep right on, I like it.

And don't worry about your lineage
poetic or natural. The Sun shines on
the jungle, you know, on the tundra
the sea, the ghetto. Wherever you were
I knew it and saw you moving. I was waiting
for you to get to work.

And now that you
are making your own days, so to speak,
even if no one reads you but me
you won't be depressed. Not
everyone can look up, even at me. It
hurts their eyes."
"Oh Sun, I'm so grateful to you!"

"Thanks and remember I'm watching. It's
easier for me to speak to you out
here. I don't have to slide down
between buildings to get your ear.
I know you love Manhattan, but
you ought to look up more often.

And
always embrace things, people earth
sky stars, as I do, freely and with
the appropriate sense of space. That
is your inclination, known in the heavens
and you should follow it to hell, if
necessary, which I doubt.


Maybe we'll
speak again in Africa, of which I too
am specially fond. Go back to sleep now
Frank, and I may leave a tiny poem
in that brain of yours as my farewell."

"Sun, don't go!" I was awake
at last. "No, go I must, they're calling
me."
"Who are they?"

Rising he said "Some
day you'll know. They're calling to you
too." Darkly he rose, and then I slept.

Monday, July 19, 2010

dreamscapes




had wild dreams last night...bold colors and beautiful but creepy characters and nonsensical-whimsy... thought this poem, and the image, would be appropriate...

The Surrealist Learns To Fly

BY JENNIFER O'GRADY

Occasionally he wakes, finds
the cool cube of his room
delirious with colors: blaring
daffodils and rigid roses,
petals a soft, translucent red

like the inside of an eyelid.
By the window, a clock's
expressionless face near glossy skins
of magazines, a telephone
the color of frozen milk

or silence, the color of old.
He is melting, his bones
grown paper-light, they travel
over the bed's pale hills, the woman
who's come to wash him.

The ceiling is a landscape
bleeding white as he floats
through the muted winter sky,
a boundless symbol of nothing.
The woman draws the blind.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

ebb and flow...


change is the constant...but all is part of the whole...





hour-glass

by martin sorescu

do i slowly empty
or fill myself?

the same flow of sand,
whichever way
you turn it.











[a trio of butterflies at the sourland mountain preserve yesterday]

Wednesday, July 14, 2010


a little wisdom from goethe...

i love this...and continually see it proven true....

"Until one is committed, there is hesitancy, the chance to draw back, always ineffectiveness concerning all acts of initiative and creation. There is one elementary truth the ignorance of which kills countless ideas and splendid plans: that the moment one definitely commits oneself, then PROVIDENCE moves too. All sorts of things occur to help one that would never otherwise have occurred. A whole stream of events issues from the decision, raising in one's favor all manner of unforeseen incidents and meetings and material assistance which no man could have dreamed would have come his way.WHATEVER YOU CAN DO OR DREAM YOU CAN BEGIN IT. BOLDNESS has GENIUS, POWER, and MAGIC in it. BEGIN IT NOW!" ~J.W. Goethe

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

be a rebel WITH a cause




woke up in the sweltering stickiness of this once-more horrifyingly humid morning that promises a prison of plus-100 degree temperatures...found myself feeling trapped in this even in the early dawn half-light...opened my journal and ferociously, defiantly wrote this affirmation:


I AM NO SLAVE

spidering out from this statement, i expanded this idea...:
[i am no slave] TO THIS HEAT
TO EXPECTATIONS
TO FEAR
TO THE PAST
TO HABIT
TO DOUBT
TO "THEM"
TO MYSELF
TO WHAT "IS"
TO BULLSHIT
ETC
ETC
ETC
ETC

and finally:

I HAVE CHOICE. I CREATE MY REALITY.


what is on your FREEDOM list? what are the attachments, the weights to which you feel bound and enslaved? ARTICULATE them, CONFRONT them, DEFY them, DISSOLVE them. NOW [even if this takes air conditioning or stripping down and running naked through the sprinkler, in the case of the oppressive weather!;}]

and here is a little piece of wisdom to illuminate this idea further...the first part is from a gem of a book that i've discovered recently-- it stands as part of a series called "girlosophy"...this particular title is "the soul survival guide" and i recommend it EMPHATICALLY to every woman-- from her early teens upward in years...it's not only GORGEOUS but wholly inspiring...--the second portion is a quote that author anthea paul includes in her text.

"The HUNGRY SPIRIT is a rebel with a cause. If you want to know the meaning of your life, you are going to have to design a higher purpose for it. The spirit within is hungry and you must feed it something more than mere existence for it to flourish. BELIEVING in something and ACTING on that belief will nourish your soul...

'sow a thought, and reap an act,
sow an act and reap a habit
sow a habit and reap a character,
sow a character and reap a destiny' [huston smith, 'the religions of man']'"


so go shake your chains, because they only exist as long as you believe in them; you, not they, shape your destiny.

Sunday, July 4, 2010

independence day


the ideal. an imagination working toward realization....

something for which to strive, something to celebrate.

happy for our independence, and our simultaneous inter-dependence...happy 4th....


America
by Walt Whitman

Centre of equal daughters, equal sons,
All, all alike endear'd, grown, ungrown, young or old,
Strong, ample, fair, enduring, capable, rich,
Perennial with the Earth, with Freedom, Law and Love,
A grand, sane, towering, seated Mother,
Chair'd in the adamant of Time.

Saturday, July 3, 2010

insect instrumentals in playful poetry ...

in buffalo today...enjoying the sweetness and the songs of sheer summer...

here's a poem in honor of a little creature who contributes to this season's audible essence...




r-p-o-p-h-e-s-s-a-g-r
by E. E. Cummings

r-p-o-p-h-e-s-s-a-g-r
who
a)s w(e loo)k
upnowgath
PPEGORHRASS
eringint(o-
aThe):l
eA
!p:
S a
(r
rIvInG .gRrEaPsPhOs)
to
rea(be)rran(com)gi(e)ngly
,grasshopper;


try to read THAT one aloud! ;)

Thursday, July 1, 2010

why i have a facebook account...




so today i am celebrating the wonders of FACEBOOK-- i really never thought i'd ever say something remotely close to this! HOWEVER it is through this ingenious thing that i have gotten back in touch with one of the most influential and inspiring people in my academic and professional life-- ms. janice arrowsmith, my 9th grade english teacher! now, for those of you who know her, this fact speaks for itself in explaining WHY i might be so excited! however, for those of you who have never had the privilege of meeting this exceptional lady and taking her class, i can offer you a little bit of a window into it with the following link...


http://www.powersentences.com/

EXPLORE! you will NEVER need to consult another source to answer a grammar question again! AND PLEASE, for your own benefit, LISTEN to the clips of ms. a herself reading our POWER SENTENCE CHANTS! i've taught these to some my own english students, and use them myself EVERY DAY!

i LOVE technology! :P

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

a little faith to quell those fears...



at the risk of being repetitive, i give you another kinsolving poem today...inspired, once again, by the multitude of birds in this virtual aviary [also apiary!] around me--


Trust

BY SUSAN KINSOLVING

Trust that there is a tiger, muscular
Tasmanian, and sly, which has never been
seen and never will be seen by any human
eye. Trust that thirty thousand sword-
fish will never near a ship, that far
from cameras or cars elephant herds live
long elephant lives. Believe that bees
by the billions find unidentified flowers
on unmapped marshes and mountains. Safe
in caves of contentment, bears sleep.
Through vast canyons, horses run while slowly
snakes stretch beyond their skins in the sun.
I must trust all this to be true, though
the few birds at my feeder watch the window
with small flutters of fear, so like my own.


such a great reminder here...take a deep breath...know that you are not alone..and know that the world will be just as it should be...let go of the fear.

[birdhouse in our magnolia tree-- with little chirping babies inside!]

Monday, June 28, 2010

zooming in...


if you haven't yet been exposed to this phenomenal poet, whose own GIFT is to sing into profundity the smallest[yet galacticENORMOUS] observations-- i am SO GLAD that I get to be the one to bring her into your world!

SUSAN KINSOLVING's THE GIFT [below] is just one of manymanymany poems she's written that simultaneously challenge/waken/comfort/enthrall me...



THE GIFT

by Susan Kinsoloving

In red foil paper was my present, just
as I had asked: a magnifying glass. I
was five, but my dismay was huge
intensified by feigned gratitude. What
to say? where was the word of my mistake?
In silence, I enlarged snowflakes,
pine needles, carpet threads, six
crumbs of cake, and the dark pupils
of my dog's eyes. But the word hid
elsewhere, almost disguised, as glass
might be the illusion of clarity. And so
it's been in all my words and hopes:
poems, the elusive gift, the microscope.



this one spoke to me today...its recreation, not simply "recollection" of childhood in the way she uses her words to capture and communicate the sincere confusion of a five-year-old self as it has spilled and crystallized into an adult passion, a life's purpose...

i love the way in which she so beautifully threads together her multisensory images for meaning... from the play with the "magnifying glass" and its "intensif[y]"ication of the "dismay" of a little girl to the twisting of her thoughts around the whole idea of finding VOICE in the piece, and in the speaker's [poet's] existence...moving from "silence" in search of the precisely perfect WORD...i read it optimistically, hopefully, happily...(though perhaps i'm missing the point and this is a frustrated, futile search for this eternally-five year old girl that will never be fulfilled-- your decision here)...

the true WORDS are in the fabric...maybe we just have to look more closely at the fibers...


well, now that you've read MY thoughts on kinsolving, here's a review of a collection "dailies and rushes" that ran in the new york times in 1999...

http://www.nytimes.com/books/99/05/09/reviews/990509.09musket.html

Saturday, June 26, 2010

growing one's joy[full] song...


[fernwood]

woke this morning in pale dawn light to the jungle-symphony of birdsong that sings in each day here in this tiny eden in the wooded heart of over-populated, over-industrialized new jersey...

lying in bed-- and even now as i sit in my outdoor office three hours later-- i am captivated by the JOYOUS ABANDONMENT [my new favorite greek word-- KEFI] with which they sing...the certainty of each unique song-- twittering, cooing, whistling-- these birds are each, inarguably, articulating a specific TRUTH...[and the truths blend together into music...]

here's a recording of one of my favorites; these little lovelies are flooding the garden now!


http://www.birdjam.com/birdsong.php?id=23&osCsid=m6ieloprrc9ql6h0l540l25v44


wishing for just an ounce, a breath, of that beautiful conviction...


[field and marshlands]

rumi wrote on this-- so here's a new perspective for each of us searching for her song...

you're song.
a wished-for song.

so through the ear to the center,
where sky is, where wind, where
silent knowing.

put seeds and cover them.
blades with sprout
where you do your work.


the song is not BY us; it IS us...we ARE, not OUR, song...it lives as us, rather than as a possession after which we need to seek, which we should covet...

we just need to give ourselves the room and nourishment and faith to grow...


[garden gate in morning]

love, & KEFI to you all today!

Friday, June 25, 2010

resurfacing...to new life, with strength and clarity and wonder and joy!






with this long pause, a hiatus of chaotic transition, reevaluation, painful growth...i am now returning to this space more myself...renewed and refreshed and energized with new passion, and heightened curiosity!

i start this new chapter with a poem by naomi shihab nye... "famous." it is a prayer and hope for my heart and what it truly desires in this moment...



FAMOUS

The river is famous to the fish.

The loud voice is famous to silence,
which knew it would inherit the earth
before anyone said so.

The cat sleeping on the fence is famous to the birds
watching him from the birdhouse.

The tear is famous, briefly, to the cheek.




The idea you carry close to your bosom
is famous to your bosom.

The boot is famous to the earth,
more famous than the dress shoe,
which is famous only to floors.

The bent photograph is famous to the one who carries it
and not at all famous to the one pictured

I want to be famous to shuffling men
who smile while crossing streets,
sticky children in grocery lines,
famous as the one who smiled back.

I want to be famous in the way a pulley is famous,
or a buttonhole, not because it did anything spectacular,
but because it never forgot what it could do.

~Naomi Shihab Nye



the poet says of her piece that it "is simply reexamining the word 'famous'...you trust a buttonhole, don't you? don't you trust a pulley to know what it is intended for? a pulley is a discreet, subtle, but very useful and important implement...whatever we pay attention to becomes famous to us. i have many heroes in my world of poetry, and their poems are famous in my mind. they resonate and return to me when i need them. they're given back to me. that makes them famous for me."

think about this: we have the CHOICE, then, what becomes famous to us! WE, not the OBJECT or IDEA or OTHER PERSON, have the power to decide to what to devote our energies and bind our hearts; we CHOOSE the source of our security, our faith, our inspiration...what an empowering thought! my hope for myself, my commitment to myself, is that i can make these choices of what becomes famous to me to be those things and ideas and people who uplift and strengthen me....



& then...what an amazing dream to strive to become FAMOUS [not INfamous ;)]to someone else for those BRIGHT and BEAUTIFUL reasons...

Sunday, May 23, 2010

the truth in my truth


"the sounding foam of primal things"


in the yoga classes i take, and even in those i now teach (frighteningly enough!), students are reminded to live yoga is to live with integrity to one's truth. the subjectivity of truth is thereby acknowledged obviously, and yet subtly, without room or reason for contestation...the multiplicity of "truth" as it exists has fascinated me for as long as i can remember, when i realized that the way in which i experience something, even my family, is very different from the way in which someone else (other family members included in the case of my example) might...it's sort of this mind-bending, potentially heavy existential question and i don't mean to make this into a post that bores or goes too much into abstractions for people to follow a really very simple idea... but i've been wondering a lot about this notion of truth lately and, inspired by the ferocious swells of the foamy, frothing ocean today, decided to share this fantastic carl sandberg poem and a photo of the fierceness (above)...


Who Am I?

by Carl Sandburg


My head knocks against the stars.
My feet are on the hilltops.
My finger-tips are in the valleys and shores of universal life.
Down in the sounding foam of primal things I reach my hands and play with pebbles of destiny.
I have been to hell and back many times.
I know all about heaven, for I have talked with God.
I dabble in the blood and guts of the terrible.
I know the passionate seizure of beauty
And the marvelous rebellion of man at all signs reading "Keep Off."


My name is Truth and I am the most elusive captive in the universe.

~~~

truth is all around us, within us, and yet IT cannot be captured, only interpreted subjectively and guessed at...yet it's real. how is this so?

Thursday, May 20, 2010

exploring in order to return...with an open heart and clear eyes




as i wrap up my time in southern california, watching the weeks slip by in the sneakily slowly(speedy)way that time seems, at the close of a chapter, to do..., i find myself getting unhelpfully nostalgic, but also perhaps productively reflective...the uncertainty of the coming months sends me scurrying to uncover the truths in my past, the places and people and experiences that have shaped themselves into the map of who i am...and i find myself wondering: from this distance i see mostly what was good in these moments, in these circumstances that in their PRESENT seemed often less than perfect, even empty; in which i found myself always searching for more-- seeing surface beauty dismissively but really focusing on that which needed fixing, alteration...

what if i could go back to each of these moments, in mapping them retrospectively through the places i've called home, and just experience them with full appreciation for the first time, with the sense of perspective i've gained from moving beyond them into newness...but then again, can i ever stop exploring? maybe this "revisitation" needs to actually happen in stages...but i'll let t.s. eliot express musings around this notion with much more eloquence ever could...



from t.s. eliot's little gidding

we shall never cease from exploration
and the end of all of our exploring
will be to arrive where we started
and know the place for the first time.



so perhaps this is life, this ever-working toward knowing places and spaces, outside and in...

Sunday, May 16, 2010

spot-on star readings...




speaks for itself. [from Free Will Astrology]


Aries Horoscope for week of May 13, 2010

What happens when someone "sells out"? Typically, it refers to a person who overrides her highest artistic standards or her soul's mandates in order to make a bundle of money. But I want to enlarge the definition to encompass any behavior that seeks popular appeal at the expense of authenticity, or any action that sacrifices integrity for the sake of gaining power. I think you have to be especially on guard against this lapse in the coming days, Aries -- not only in yourself but also in those you're close to.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

contemplating bars, wings, and song...





Sympathy

by Paul Laurence Dunbar

I know what the caged bird feels, alas!
When the sun is bright on the upland slopes;
When the wind stirs soft through the springing grass,
And the river flows like a stream of glass;
When the first bird sings and the first bud opes,
And the faint perfume from its chalice steals—
I know what the caged bird feels!


I know why the caged bird beats his wing
Till its blood is red on the cruel bars;
For he must fly back to his perch and cling
When he fain would be on the bough a-swing;
And a pain still throbs in the old, old scars
And they pulse again with a keener sting—
I know why he beats his wing!


I know why the caged bird sings, ah me,
When his wing is bruised and his bosom sore,—
When he beats his bars and he would be free;
It is not a carol of joy or glee,
But a prayer that he sends from his heart’s deep core,
But a plea, that upward to Heaven he flings—
I know why the caged bird sings!


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Caged Bird


by Maya Angelou

Maya Angelou
A free bird leaps
on the back of the wind
and floats downstream
till the current ends
and dips his wing
in the orange sun rays
and dares to claim the sky.


But a bird that stalks
down his narrow cage
can seldom see through
his bars of rage
his wings are clipped and
his feet are tied
so he opens his throat to sing.


The caged bird sings
with a fearful trill
of things unknown
but longed for still
and his tune is heard
on the distant hill
for the caged bird
sings of freedom.


The free bird thinks of another breeze
and the trade winds soft through the sighing trees
and the fat worms waiting on a dawn bright lawn
and he names the sky his own
But a caged bird stands on the grave of dreams
his shadow shouts on a nightmare scream
his wings are clipped and his feet are tied
so he opens his throat to sing.


The caged bird sings
with a fearful trill
of things unknown
but longed for still
and his tune is heard
on the distant hill
for the caged bird
sings of freedom.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

we are all made of stars

nothing is perhaps more exciting than finding a surprise of a poem that quickens one's pulse and opens one's heart with a joy in hearing, seeing, feeling that one's own, perhaps until now inarticulatable experience, amorphous but oh so real ideas, have been not only shared by someone else, but captured in a way that sings truth...


i had this wonderful surprise this morning when i opened my inbox holding my poem of the day email from poetryfoundation.org...a new one, from a poet unfamiliar to me. i apologize if any of you subscribe to this email list as well and already got this dose of poetic beauty today but i couldn't resist including it here!





Imagining Starry
by Marie Ponsot


The place of language is the place between me

and the world of presences I have lost

—complex country, not flat. Its elements free-

float, coherent for luck to come across;

its lines curve as in a mental orrery

implicit with stars in active orbit,

only their slowness or swiftness lost to sense.

The will dissolves here. It becomes the infinite

air of imagination that stirs immense

among losses and leaves me less desolate.

Breathing it I spot a sentence or a name,

a rescuer, charted for recovery,

to speak against the daily sinking flame

& the shrinking waters of the mortal sea.


~

how beautifully ponsot speaks of the way in which we can use language and imagination to understand and heal our own internal landscapes. amazing how true it is that by letting go of the will, letting it expand into new dimensions of unexplored size and shape and scope through breath [inhale, exhale] we can alleviate feelings of isolation, of loss. here it is that we map the constellations of our relationships with others and with the larger universe, the "rescuers" who connect us once more by helping us to focus not solely upon what is "daily" or "mortal" but what in us is infinite...

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

tracking the winds, charting a course...




since moving here, i've noticed that people in these beach cities are a bit preoccupied with weather vanes...where back in new jersey these, serving both scientific and artistic functions, are typically reserved for the handful of quaint old barns and farmhouses nestled into the once-open rolling hills of a present-day housing development complete with golf course, here these trackers of the wind's whimsy are decorative elements on nearly every third or so home...those i've included in the photos above and directly below follow the most common trend of the nautical theme...a whale's nose or a swordfish tale pointing out the source and the course of the current breeze...




but this one here is a favorite of mine...a desert scene, complete with the sombrero-sporting, guitar-strumming caballero and some coyotes...



with the winds that are characterizing these recent days at the seashore, and inland as well, as blustery ones, i've been thinking about the wind's power, literally so of course, but also of the way in which it serves to indicate, metaphorically speaking, direction and the mapping of the future and its course...the phrase "the winds of change" holds within its meaning a connection between humans and the elemental...our destinies tied up with these cosmic forces...the markers on the weather vane spin, a recognition of a shift from east to west, or vice versa, or to the north or to the south... bringing us perhaps a complete one-hundred and eighty degrees from where we began that very same morning.

it's easy to imagine, maybe comforting even, that one's fate is determined by the winds, even by that measured by a wrought iron sea creature...it makes an allowance for the blaming of circumstance for any given outcome and lifts the sometimes staggering weight of individual responsibility...but what if one chooses not to be moved by the wind, not to take the direction upon which it decides and instead, charts one's own course in spite of the challenge that comes with this conviction...

i include today a poem by ella wheeler wilcox that expresses just this possibility, but at nautical fact...

THE WINDS OF FATE

one ship drives east and another drives west
with the selfsame winds that blow
'tis he set of the sails
and not of the gales
which tells us the way to go.

like the winds of the sea are the ways of fate,
as we voyage along through life;
'tis the set of a soul
that decides the goal,
and not the calm or the strife.



~
how empowering a concept! to imagine that circumstance, as something external, does not write one's story, and that everything one needs in order to follow one's heart is to believe in and listen to that "selfsame" unique and individual heart.

Monday, May 10, 2010

owl wisdom...

this weekend, emily surprised me with the loveliest necklace from a local thrift store; i'd had my eye on it, tried it on, but had decided against buying it-- sneakily, she scooped it up and purchased it for me, presenting it bubblingly as we mosied home on sunday afternoon...this little owl with sparkling eyes is my favorite new accessory, an accentof beauty and a talisman of wisdom that i wil take with me into the newness of my coming adventures!




this little fellow has gotten me thinking about the owl, one of my favorite birds..., in poetry and in literature....i've included two poems today where the wise creature is featured, captured elusively and precisely simultaneously....

first is~



A Barred Owl

by Richard Wilbur

Richard Wilbur
The warping night air having brought the boom
Of an owl's voice into her darkened room,
We tell the wakened child that all she heard
Was an odd question from a forest bird,
Asking of us, if rightly listened to,
"Who cooks for you?" and then "Who cooks for you?"


Words, which can make our terrors bravely clear,
Can also thus domesticate a fear,
And send a small child back to sleep at night
Not listening for the sound of stealthy flight
Or dreaming of some small thing in a claw
Borne up to some dark branch and eaten raw.
& second is one of my favorite poems of all time; the owl is only mentioned, but i think he plays an important part in creating the magic and the mood of the piece...

Fern Hill

by Dylan Thomas


Now as I was young and easy under the apple boughs
About the lilting house and happy as the grass was green,
The night above the dingle starry,
Time let me hail and climb
Golden in the heydays of his eyes,
And honoured among wagons I was prince of the apple towns
And once below a time I lordly had the trees and leaves
Trail with daisies and barley
Down the rivers of the windfall light.


And as I was green and carefree, famous among the barns
About the happy yard and singing as the farm was home,
In the sun that is young once only,
Time let me play and be
Golden in the mercy of his means,
And green and golden I was huntsman and herdsman, the calves
Sang to my horn, the foxes on the hills barked clear and cold,
And the sabbath rang slowly
In the pebbles of the holy streams.


All the sun long it was running, it was lovely, the hay
Fields high as the house, the tunes from the chimneys, it was air
And playing, lovely and watery
And fire green as grass.
And nightly under the simple stars
As I rode to sleep the owls were bearing the farm away,
All the moon long I heard, blessed among stables, the nightjars
Flying with the ricks, and the horses
Flashing into the dark.


And then to awake, and the farm, like a wanderer white
With the dew, come back, the cock on his shoulder: it was all
Shining, it was Adam and maiden,
The sky gathered again
And the sun grew round that very day.
So it must have been after the birth of the simple light
In the first, spinning place, the spellbound horses walking warm
Out of the whinnying green stable
On to the fields of praise.


And honoured among foxes and pheasants by the gay house
Under the new made clouds and happy as the heart was long,
In the sun born over and over,
I ran my heedless ways,
My wishes raced through the house high hay
And nothing I cared, at my sky blue trades, that time allows
In all his tuneful turning so few and such morning songs
Before the children green and golden
Follow him out of grace,


Nothing I cared, in the lamb white days, that time would take me
Up to the swallow thronged loft by the shadow of my hand,
In the moon that is always rising,
Nor that riding to sleep
I should hear him fly with the high fields
And wake to the farm forever fled from the childless land.
Oh as I was young and easy in the mercy of his means,
Time held me green and dying
Though I sang in my chains like the sea.


finally, if you haven't yet read GWINNA, please do!the owl wisdom here is transformative....

Sunday, May 9, 2010

less is sometimes more...abundance in simplicity


i have the totally delightful pleasure of hosting emily and her gorgeous "love-bug" of a golden this weekend...and as a result, it has been a weekend already bursting with love and joy and delicious food and long walks and fabulous company & conversation...

em brought me this poem to perfectly encapsulate the essence of what i am realizing is true wealth, true abundance in this life...and this is, essentially, wonderment over the essentials, the simple miracles. the meaning of this poem by kay ryan (the current poet laureate of the us), "that will to divest," is perhaps a little different in its intention than what i am taking from it; she talks about the fact that so much poetry is excessive and in reality, she believes that less is more-- precision is the key...applicable to everything though...

Meaning:once
you've swept
the shelves
of spoons
and plates
you kept
for guests
it gets harder
not to also
simplify the larder,
not to dismiss
rooms, not to
divest yourself
of all the chairs
but one, not
to test what singleness

Thursday, May 6, 2010

poetics of a parisian breakfast...






breakfasted with bree at our normal thursday spot-- la galette creperie, right across from the pacific ocean, and simultaneously on a paris street corner...


"why, sometimes i've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast!"








BON APPETIT!

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

breathing deeply, sans insect ingestion

today, a quotation from tom robbins' ANOTHER ROADSIDE ATTRACTION, so generously given to me by the beautiful and talented and brilliant emily graves! here, one of the central characters, amanda...a free spirited lady who is herself described as having "native curiosity [that] popp[ed] its buttons" [! delightful!], digests and experiments with a new concept...


"among the haida indians of the pacific northwest, the verb for "making poetry" is the same as the verb "to breathe."such tidbits of ethnic lore delighted amanda, and she vowed that from that time onward she would try to regulate each breath as if she were composing a poem. she was as good as her word, and her new style of breathing added to her warehouse of personal charm.

once, while breathing an especially strenuous stanza, she sucked in a stinkbug that had been bumbling by. 'what a rotten rhyme,'she gagged. 'i think i'll go back to prose.'"
p.168

if this made you giggle just a little, then it has served its purpose. :)

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

joni wisdom & love, via e.e.cummings





in my mailbox today. enough said.

love to this phenomenal woman!

Monday, May 3, 2010

animal dreams



this exuberant pup goofily engaged in a rowdy game of fetch with his indulgent twenty-something tattooed male owner down at the beach this evening...seeing this makes me miss such uninhibited joy and uncomplicated love in my own day-to-day...luckily, though, fellows such as my friend in the above photo are a strong presence in the community; i get to share some of the doggie goodness this way :)

he got me thinking, though, as he ran after that ball again and again, charging over the sand and stones, plunging when required into the oh-so-chilly waves~ 'what is he imagining, feeling, right now? moment to moment?' i've always been curious about the shapes and scopes of the mental maps of animals; in a way, they seem so much simpler, blissfully, than my own. but at the same point, couldn't they just be that much more tangled? or more sophisticated?

in her novel ANIMAL DREAMS, barbara kingsolover characterizes the dreams of animals as being rooted in the ordinary, in the quotidian, saying that animals, humans included, can only dream that with which they are familiar... here is an exchange between codi, the book's main character, and loyd, her sort-of "suitor"...i love the idea behind it, that we can control our destiny through our dreams...

Codi says..."So you think we all just have animal dreams. We can't think of anything to dream except our ordinary lives."
& Loyd says in reply..."Only if you have an ordinary life. If you want sweet dreams, you've got to live a sweet life."


this is perhaps one of my favorite novels, but i think b.k. may have underestimated the magic of the mindscapes of animals...the following poem presents some answers to the questions on my own mind in regard to this curiosity...so many surprising words and bizarre turns-of-phrase...this is one upon which to sleep, to dream...

Four Questions Regarding the Dreams of Animals
by Susan Stewart


1. Is it true that they dream?

It is true, for the spaces of night surround them with shape and purpose, like a warm hollow below the shoulders, or between the curve of thigh and belly.
The land itself can lie like this. Hence our understanding of giants.
The wind and the grass cry out to the arms of their sleep as the shore cries out, and buries its face in the bruised sea.
We all have heard barns and fences splintering against the dark with a weight that is more than wood.
The stars, too, bear witness. We can read their tails and claws as we would read the signs of our own dreams; a knot of sheets, scratches defining the edges of the body, the position of the legs upon waking.
The cage and the forest are as helpless in the night as a pair of open hands holding rain.

2. Do they dream of the past or of the future?

Think of the way a woman who wanders the roads could step into an empty farmhouse one afternoon and find a basket of eggs, some unopened letters, the pillowcases embroidered with initials that once were hers.
Think of her happiness as she sleeps in the daylilies; the air is always heaviest at the start of dusk.
Cows, for example, find each part of themselves traveling at a different rate of speed. Their bells call back to their burdened hearts the way a sparrow taunts an old hawk.
As far as the badger and the owl are concerned, the past is a silver trout circling in the ice. Each night he swims through their waking and makes his way back to the moon.
Clouds file through the dark like prisoners through an endless yard. Deer are made visible by their hunger.
I could also mention the hopes of common spiders: green thread sailing from an infinite spool, a web, a thin nest, a child dragging a white rope slowly through the sand.

3. Do they dream of this world or of another?

The prairie lies open like a vacant eye, blind to everything but the wind. From the tall grass the sky is an industrious map that bursts with rivers and cities. A black hawk waltzes against his clumsy wings, the buzzards grow bored with the dead.
A screendoor flapping idly on an August afternoon or a woman fanning herself in church; this is how the tails of snakes and cats keep time even in sleep.
There are sudden flashes of light to account for. Alligators, tormented by knots and vines, take these as a sign of grace. Eagles find solace in the far glow of towns, in the small yellow bulb a child keeps by his bed. The lightning that scars the horizon of the meadow is carried in the desperate gaze of foxes.
Have other skies fallen into this sky? All the evidence seems to say so.
Conspiracy of air, conspiracy of ice, the silver trout is thirsty for morning, the prairie dog shivers with sweat. Skeletons of gulls lie scattered on the dunes, their beaks still parted by whispering. These are the languages that fall beyond our hearing.
Imagine the way rain falls around a house at night, invisible to its sleepers. They do not dream of us.

4. How can we learn more?

This is all we will ever know.


...

Sunday, May 2, 2010

healing in a spring garden...




"just simply alive,
both of us, I
and the poppy."

by issa [painting and poem, from "in a spring garden" edited by richard lewis, artwork by ezra jack keats]


during my contemporary poetry class at rutgers with the brilliant harriet davidson, i did an in-depth study of a collection by amy gerstler, a fairly fresh but established poet of today...it was mere luck really that i stumbled upon her work-- even harriet hadn't heard of her when i proposed doing my project on her book, an entrancing and haunting collection MEDICINE...i just dug out my paper, a review of the book, and i'll included some quotations from my own writing here to help set up my poem for today, a welcome to may! please, forgive the hyper academic "mumbo-jumbo" [as green gables gilbert would say to anne!] of some of it!

"the concept of 'medicine' is immediately dependent upon two conditions: the possibility of sickness and the concurrent possibility of a return to health. in this sense, these terms, in their bookending, serve to define life as limited by finite mortality. a comprehensive interpretation of amy gerstler's collection thus entitled illuminates an artistic manifestation of highly personalized, yet undeniably universal, interior grappling with these vastest of paradoxical issues of multilevel human experience. in this existential anxiety, gerstler explores through her poetry the ironically simultaneous realities of a vital mortality defined by an inevitable end and the perpetuation of a cyclical natural continuity in their interactive tension with the notion of faith. gerstler's MEDICINE complicates both the definition of disease and the understanding of healing in the possibilities for and limitations of cure. these poems collectively are a meditation on what underlines human lives physically, mentally, and spiritually. further, the material upon which this poetry dwells and that its composition attempts to capture circle around that which makes us at once fallibly human and infinitely immortal. through the cathartic process of poetic transformation, gerstler does not seek to uncover an anesthetic for both physical and psychical pain. rather, she creates a language with which to demonstrate that the reimagination of that pain of loss, of love, and of life, is a type of medicine in itself..." ~g. n., 2006

In Perpetual Spring

by Amy Gerstler

Amy Gerstler
Gardens are also good places
to sulk. You pass beds of
spiky voodoo lilies
and trip over the roots
of a sweet gum tree,
in search of medieval
plants whose leaves,
when they drop off
turn into birds
if they fall on land,
and colored carp if they
plop into water.


Suddenly the archetypal
human desire for peace
with every other species
wells up in you. The lion
and the lamb cuddling up.
The snake and the snail, kissing.
Even the prick of the thistle,
queen of the weeds, revives
your secret belief
in perpetual spring,
your faith that for every hurt
there is a leaf to cure it.


~

as someone who is craving her own garden space, this is achingly appropriate in this fresh spring season...

and here's just a little tid bit i found in my most recent yoga journal issue-- goofy, a bit, but fun...certainly takes this idea of healing in the garden quite literally...enjoy! :)

http://www.yogajournal.com/practice/2752

Saturday, May 1, 2010

may day! [a reflection]



waldorf schools, as those of you for whom this is not unfamiliar territory know, celebrate each MAY DAY, the first of the month, with an annual MAY FAIRE-- a beautiful festival centered upon this welcoming of the new season in all of its full blooming glory. the main event revolves around the may pole dance, in which all of the grades participate [either in the intricate and gorgeously choreographed dances themselves or as the musicians from whom the dancers take their rhythm!]at princeton waldorf, if i'm not just falsely remembering this, the teachers also took part in this dancing themselves...i was absolutely and unexpectedly enchanted by the whole scene this year...walking on to the flowering campus, transformed by garlands upon garlands of woven blossoms and leaves and vines of all colors and intoxicating scents...a sea of smiling, almost sprightly people, young and old, clad in soft white clothing, many barefoot, and crowned with flower wreaths...the may pole at the heart of the grassy expanse, its ribbons of white and red and pink billowing in the breeze as they meticulously were wound together by those dancing them into an intricate and stunning pattern while recorders and cellos and violins and drums and voices harmonized....the pictures i've included in this post capture just a touch of the magic of the day, but i hope that it translates...


fifth grade, perhaps my favorite class with whom to work, kept their dignity in spite of the hysterical title of their musical selection "lady hepburn belches"!




here, the second grade adorably, and incredibly successfully[!], dances into an organized weave...





maybe my favorite photo from the whole day...can you think of anything more delicious than dancing barefoot in lush green grass???







and just a couple more snapshot moments of the morning....



don't know this guy but apparently the little llama found him VERY interesting!








three of my bounciest and sweetly fierce fourth grade girlies, peacing out



& this, well, it simply speaks for itself!

HAPPY MAY, EVERYONE!