I wish you each deep love and every happiness in the New Year...
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Love's Funny That Way...
I wish you each deep love and every happiness in the New Year...
Monday, December 29, 2008
Message to kj
Sunday, December 28, 2008
The Bungelow at Heart Boulevard
.
Yes?
.
This is the landlord. I’m serving notice you have to leave.
Leave? Why?
.
The rent is overdue.
.
What? Since when?
.
It’s months behind.
.
But I only occupy a small corner of this heart—there's plenty of room for others. I love the space, really. I thought the rent was taken care of.
.
It was, but now the withdrawals have exceeded the deposits. You can’t stay any longer.
.
But I have important memories here. And wishes and hopes.
.
Sorry, you have to go.
.
What if I take over the payments?
.
By yourself? What is your currency? The rent has always been paid in tendered denominations and mutual funds.
.
I can pay it that way too.
.
But if it’s just you the tendering will only be one way and the funds won’t be mutual. That is not standard practice.
.
Look, I have my own reserve to pay the rent. Can’t you accept that?
.
For how long?
.
I don’t know. Maybe I’ll just stay a few months more. But maybe I'll stay indefinitely. This space is an investment in something I care about.
.
But no more deposits? That’s risky business.
.
Who’s to say? There’s a good amount of earned equity here already. I don’t want to move as long as I feel the way I do.
.
Even if you don’t get a return on your investment? Even if you lose everything you’ve put in?
.
Yes, it’s a chance I will take. In this case I may view loss and gain the same way.
.
Even if your investment is no longer deliverable?
.
Yes, even then. But who’s to say one way or another? What does anybody know for certain?
.
Listen, I just collect the rent. I make sure the funds don’t get depleted. Staying put and making the payments yourself--it seems reckless, risky.
.
It may be. But I don’t mind. It’s not like I can’t leave. I just don’t want to, at least not yet. There are riches here. They matter to me.
.
You'll have to give notice if you leave.
.
Yes, of course, you’ll be the second to know. Right after myself.
Friday, December 26, 2008
Thursday, December 25, 2008
Thursday 13: Farewell to Christmas!
3. The Christmas tree is topped not with a star or an angel, but in tribute of Rosie, our English Springer Spaniel who will never be forgotten.
5. Who cut down on shopping and spending money this year? From the look of the presents piled in front of the tree, it wasn't my family. Or was it? Actually, I think we all did cut back, and we all felt good about it.
6. Guess who slept over Christmas Eve along with his parents and was the most fun from beginning to end?
7. JB is the easiest person to buy gifts for. She loves everything, the more unique, the better. These "slippers" were in her stocking this year, compliments of Jess. Of course they were right at home with her polka dot socks.
8. We picked my Mom up for Christmas dinner. Mr. Ryan calls her Gum-ma for no reason except that's what he started calling her. She will be 93 years old on January 5th, and JB and I have told her we will take her to the Mohegan Sun Casino for the day, so she can play the quarter slot machines. She does not travel well and her memory does not work, but the Casino it will be.
10. Mr. Ryan's grandparents (JB & me) got him a Jack-in-the-Box. I wish the photo were clearer, but no doubt he loved loved loved it. Beside him, of course, is Esther the resident Witch, who only leaves the couch when she has been drinking too much and tries to fly, with mixed results.
Wednesday, December 24, 2008
Happy Holidays
Sunday, December 21, 2008
Get Mad Instead
And let me end with the six boxes of 250 books that arrived at my back door two weeks ago. One hundred will find their way to book critics, reviewers and the like. One will be sent to Jodie Foster, who I think would play a perfect "Lily" on the big screen. A half dozen have already been dropped off at one local cafe and one independent bookstore. Thirteen have been sold, signed and mailed out from # 9, and a few have been lovingly given to special people for special reasons. Life could not be more paradoxical: at one of the more difficult times in my life, one of the more exhilarating achievements is unfolding.
And as of today, when I start to fold too, I'll do my best to get mad instead.
Friday, December 19, 2008
ValGal & The Magic Cottage
Valerie Walsh also known as my pal ValGal. I was hoping I might find one of her paintings to grace the cover of the story of Alex and Lily. I did not expect, and still can't believe, that Val would offer to paint an original in honor of my first book. This incredible artist gave me the gift of her incredible artwork, and she made me feel like I was doing her a favor.
.
.
I've always felt blessed by my friends. They've been there for me in many special moments in my life. But in this moment, with this gift, by this artist--well, how lucky can a person be?
Thanks Val. I'm forever grateful.
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Thank You: Part 3
Sunday, December 14, 2008
Thank You: Part 2
Saturday, December 13, 2008
The Flight of the Heart
.
I wrote this poem a couple of years ago. I hope its true that the heart can fly, because I'd like to think there is a place that love and blessings thrive and protect, no matter what.
.
Flight of the Heart
.
A wide winged bird settled here last spring
in this farming town with college twists,
relaxing in the gardens and goings on
and never for a moment suspecting
that an ageless soul mate
had begun its flight east.
.
Everything changed in that moment
and it will now be what it was not before--
a homeland different and apart,
mourning the smallest and largest of possibilities,
burying the future under the past—
not the normal order of things—
and all of it unable to settle
in this ancient place of home.
.
When the distance cannot be accommodated,
the little laughters and easy understanding,
the scholarly wisdom and worldly passion
of exploding change
will be forgotten,
lovingly tucked away
.
Until one day,
when the one reason that is every reason
is no longer unforeseen,
the joy seems less precise:
when that happens
another shift occurs
and only then they might know
a second settling
of the flight of the heart.
.
II.
.
It begins quietly,
one November day
when the ground is golden
and the trees stretch their bare limbs
up and out, holding tight.
That is when the question is clear:
How wide can a heart stretch?
Can it expand so much
that the little hearts inside drop their protective toothpicks,
with a sigh and surrender
and step bravely past the boundaries of time and space?
.
The wide winged bird watches it all,
no longer alone
but in a still point
accepting this flight of destiny
now rooted in improbable trust
and carefully hidden in the wet leaves.
.
When the shift was certain,
when the change was solid,
when confusion became commitment,
the aching perseverating question
of how this could be
sheepishly lingered
so everything can hold firm,
until the flight of the heart
can gently rest.
.
III.
.
It is another day now.
The seasons extend and endure,
a transformation so shocking and complete,
it is outmatched only by a distance
so circular it cannot be traced,
not yet, maybe never.
From the sweetest lamenting gifts,
through all these continents,
the flight of the heart continues,
where it will rest in a treetop
safe from strangers below
and reachable only through the rare and special moments
of timeless love.
.
IV.
.
Ten days and ten months and ten years later
the leaves again fall
and the tree limbs still stretch.
The wind carries the flight of the heart
to sacred ground
where the wide winged bird
and its hallowed soul mate
forever rest.
.
The resting times and places are infrequent--
choices still built on virtue and grace--
but it does not matter.
Theirs is the solitary life, a union
so bound to godliness
that their lifetimes together are endless
In a holy place where only love rules.
Thursday, December 11, 2008
Thanks
.
A female humpback whale had become entangled in a spider web of crab traps and lines. She was weighted down by hundreds of pounds of traps that caused her to struggle to stay afloat.
.
She also had hundreds of yards of line rope wrapped around her body, her tail, her torso, a line tugging in her mouth.
.
A fisherman spotted her just east of the Faralon Islands (outside the Golden Gate) and radioed for help.
.
Within a few hours, the rescue team arrived and determined that she was so bad off, the only way to save her was to dive in and untangle her-- a very dangerous proposition. One slap of the tail could kill a rescuer.
.
They worked for hours with curved knives and eventually freed her.
.
When she was free, the divers say she swam in what seemed like joyous circles.
.
She then came back to each and every diver, one at a time, nudged them, and pushed gently, thanking them.
Some say it was the most incredibly beautiful experience of their lives.
.
The guy who cut the rope out of her mouth says her eye was following him the whole time, and he will never be the same.
.
May you, all of those you love, be so fortunate...
To be surrounded by people who will help you get untangled from the things that are binding you.
And may you always know the joy of giving and receiving gratitude.
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
IT'S HERE!
Tuesday, December 09, 2008
Monday Night Inspiration
that I have found it easier to read the mystery
told in tears and understood Thee better
in sorrow than in joy.
.George William Russell, 1867-1930
.
This was the prompt at my writing group last night. I understood this totally. So for what it's worth, with some apology for not being more uplifting as the holidays approach, here's my response to a theme I too think about. I know I'm abit somber these days, and the truth is I can't say if this poem is uplifting or depressing, but here it is:
.
For Love
.
It’s only one arm,
Okay its dominant
But I can still
Raise broth to my frozen lips.
.
Only one eye,
The other choked blind
Though still I see your shadow
Gracefully in flight.
.
I gave up my voice
So I could hear yours
When the wires
Misfired and static reigned.
.
My steps though mis-shapened,
Hobble past space
Where molecular memory
Settled in.
.
Forgive me on a day
When my knees give out
And I whimper toward
Whatever grace isn’t.
.
When I was whole
I moved too quickly
To notice almost anything.
Lucky loss has given me sight.
.
My smile survived
because it double duties
With its tearful turn downward
At midnight, through the howls.
.
Yesterday I watched a cattail
Bend and balance
And I remembered when
My heart moved like that.
.
This loss of limb and life
Love lust and luster:
What a tiny price
What a tiny price.
.
I wonder in the years ahead
Should my parts should regenerate
If I will miss
The space I’ve forfeited.
.
I wonder if sorrow
Might reappear as joy
filled with the love
That’s made me whole.
Monday, December 08, 2008
A Christmas Story
I am 12 and my mother is sad. She sleeps during the day and tells me to clean my room when I ask her to play with me. She is crazy that my room be clean, every day she tells me to clean it again. What’s the sense of folding my clothes when they just stay on the floor anyway? I’ve never had a bureau and if I did I would use it for my art supplies. She tells me there will be mice if I don’t pick up the candy wrappers but that only happened once, and at the time there were no wrappers at all.
.
My brother Joey is in Ohio and all I want for Christmas is for him to come home. We waited for him for Thanksgiving but he never came. We didn’t know he didn’t have a ride until two days later, when my mother could pay to have her cell phone turned on again. Then Joey called and said he didn’t call us because the phone was disconnected, but maybe he might come for Christmas. I am making a birthday and Christmas card for him that says “To Joey, my brother, I love you."
.
Sometimes My counselor asks me if I’m cold or hungry. I always say no I’m fine because that is the truth. My counselor wants my mother to leave fruit out for me so I can decide to have it when I want. My mother hasn’t done that yet, but lately she’s been asking me if I want an apple and if I say yes she unlocks the pantry door and gives me one.
My mother cleans our apartment everyday. It is spotless. She even takes the oven door off and puts this stuff on it that make it look brand new. We have two couches in the living room, one table and three chairs in the dining room, I have a mattress and my mother and Chris just got a new one. Once my mother lit a candle in the dining room and it changed the way the whole room looked.
.
For Christmas I could use some tops and pants. Right now I have four tops and three pairs of pants, but they are supposed to be either blue or beige for school and sometimes I get in trouble because I’m not wearing the right colors. The school counselor told my counselor that sometimes my clothes don’t look clean. That’s probably because I try to wash them in the bathtub but they don’t always dry right and we don’t have an iron so I smooth them out with my hands.
.
I draw to keep myself busy and I hope I get some markers for Christmas too. A few years ago we were in a shelter at Christmas and Joey and I got eight presents each. They were all wrapped and my mother was really happy and relaxed. This year I hope I get at least two presents. We didn’t have electricity for two months because my mother and Chris couldn’t pay the bill. Chris rigged up an extension cord to the neighbor’s next door for some of the time, It’s a good thing I don’t mind the cold. And a few times my mother lit candles at night, which was nice.
.
When Joey left for Ohio the day of my birthday I wrote in a math book that my teacher fucked herself. The vice principal showed my counselor when she came to see me at school and she asked me why I did that. I started crying and told her because my brother moved away. I thought it was better to write that about a teacher I liked instead of hated, but I hurt her feelings and I told her I was sorry.
One time the counselor drove my mother and me to a parking lot so we would talk without Chris hearing and I told my mother that I get scared when Chris yells at her. He is jealous and accusing her of seeing other men, even though she never leaves the house. I also told her I could hear them in the bedroom and I didn’t like it one bit. Since then when Chris yells my mother comes in my room and tells me she is not afraid at all, and there is nothing for me to be afraid about. That makes me feel better.
The thing I would like most for Christmas, besides clothes and markers, is more time with my mother. I want her to be happy. I want us to play crazy eights and laugh. But even more than that, I want Joey to come home. He makes us all laugh.
Sunday, December 07, 2008
Bittersweet
Still, certain joyful aspects do not escape me as I head into the holidays. For example:
I love the way the light shines on my house.
I love having Mr. Ryan in my life.
I made an apple pie, and it was good.
JB and I made my mother's recipe for homemade raviolis, and they were awesome....
Topped of course with my Italian father's home made spaghetti sauce.
I'm grateful for my fruit basket.
And the fact that I know how to cook a turkey!
I have a lot to be grateful for. I know that.
Most of the time....
Wednesday, December 03, 2008
Who Knows the Crow?
.
You are reading the words of one of my favorite bloggers, Human Being, who lives in Iran. She inspired me to write the following poem, which I dedicate to her:
.
Who Knows the Crow
.
When was the last time you saw a crow fidget
Then squawk then rail against the oddity of the way things are,
Which in the eyes of the crow
Means that the clouds darken without warning
And the chill rises without care?
You might think you’re hearing irritation
Or exasperation
Perhaps even disgust
But when you notice the quickened pace
One leg to the other
You know it’s the dark and chill of common fear.
Sparkly things hidden in a needle nest
Falling in enough time
To be rescued if the mood was right.
But the mood is not right
So this coveted glitter falls below the fault line,
lost security from the one bright spot.
I saw a crow like this last week
Its sharp beak turning in all directions
Circle black eyes darting everywhere
Preparing for that which cannot be stopped,
For that for which you cannot prepare.
“Birdie,” I shouted. "Slow down. It’s just the wind.”
Did I hear a response? Did I hear an answer
Cloaked in pity?
Did I hear, “Person, you have no idea!”
“Yes I do,” I shouted. “I know.”
“No, no,” its body moving like wild fire, “you don’t know.”
The crow quickens its movements,
Clenches its webbed nails into the bark,
Instinctively holding on
Wings waiting for a force it cannot defeat.
Turning its head in perplexity
Unsure how its sparkly bounty broke free
Is this preparing to die?
It’s quiet now.
The wind has blown the roof two miles east
And tree branches litter the ground
Like railroad tracks splintered open.
I am walking these woods again
Perched to hear the crow’s surrender
Perched to clench my own webbed nails into the silvered bark
Steadying my grip, calling out
Seeking reassurance from beady eyes
And spent exhaustion.
“Person,” I hear “We were swept away.
It was not possible to hold on.”
“Oh my dear crow,” I said, “So where are we then?
Are we safe? Or are we too buried
Below the fault line?”
“The fault line?" each word sputtered hard and tough,
“No person,” the crow replies, “we are above it all.
We are flying free.
Our fear is gone.”
Monday, December 01, 2008
The Light Stays On!
Saturday, November 29, 2008
Baino!
.
Your first observation is the fuck and the wit
Highlighted boldly, a quite perfect fit
For this woman who waxes and cleverly wanes
About family and futures and gentlemanly manes.
.
Not! Australian by birth,
Open by choice
She welcomes outrageous
In her tolerant voice.
.
Is her accent as cool as one might conclude?
I imagine she yells, but stops cold at rude.
She swears and complains and cynically chats
Yet a vulnerable kindness covers all that.
.
A writer she is, with a widely world view--
A pudgy white chick who knows what to do.
She polishes tales of corruption and rabbits,
About ClareBear and Dummerboy and various habits.
.
She’s Baino the brave
And she’s plotting her trip:
A stop in New England
Then Houston and zip
.
To the west coast and back
Cross the sea to the Royds.
Whatever she lacks
She’s too real to avoid.
.
A Shirley Bassey style
And a backside with plunge
She'll travel long miles
Through beauty and grunge.
.
She fashions herself
With a steady true hand
And welcomes you warmly
Into Ms. Baino-land!
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
And My 20,000 Visitor is....
BAINO
.
BAINO
.
baino
.
BAINO
.baino
.
How fitting that the irreverent, intriguing, irresistible and down under Baino is my 20,000 visitor. She is thereby entitled to an original kj poem of her choice. The subject/theme can be anything her heart desires, expect, Baino, please don't ask me to enter the medical or non-medical world of bodily functions. I'm simply too genteel for that.
.
Shall I rhyme? Or not?
.
Include favorite words?
.
Write about favorite people?
.
Or philosophize?
.
Or politicize?
.
Serious or silly?
.
I await instruction. It's up to Baino....
P.S. Studio Lolo, you made a valiant effort. :)
Monday, November 24, 2008
19,922
.
If you happen to be visitor # 20,000 I will write a poem of your choice for you. Any theme or topic you want
with the exception of bodily fluids.
.
I'll keep you posted.
Sunday, November 23, 2008
A Night Away
.
Here's the background on the Red Lion Inn:
.
The Red Lion Inn also became the center of village life, where people could gather, exchange pleasantries, discuss the issues of the day and relax at the end of the day. In the winter of 1786, Daniel Shays led a group of more than 100 local farmers and citizens in protest to burdensome post-war taxation. Stockbridge was chosen as its headquarters for what became known as "Shays Rebellion," and sentinels stood on guard and patrolled the streets. The Red Lion Inn's participation in these early events in the birth of the United States has earned it a place in the history books.
.
So welcome to Stockbridge, Massachusetts:
Staying at the Red Lion Inn is stepping into history.
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
People I Know: "H"
We met again quite unexpectedly two years later at a conference in Florida. She was with her best friend and I was with JB. The four of us had a grand time sunning and funning through the soft sand and warm nights.
We’re separated by a hundred miles and too little time. Still, “H” manages to sneak away every six months or so and for a couple of days we catch up and wind down. Other times we bring our families together, often in Provincetown, where her thirteen year old son and I rise early and along with our cameras watch the sun rise too.
She arrived last weekend with a bottle of wine and box of tea. It was on a hard day when I had just left a three year old little girl and her two year old brother. They had not seen their mother since they were taken from her two weeks ago for neglect, and they found comfort in my familiar voice and face. They held on to me and sobbed when I had to leave them. I won’t forget the sound of their sadness any time soon.
I was telling “H” about this and we got to talking about how few people anyone can really count on in life.
“How many for you?” I asked her.
"Not many at all,” She paused, “well, you,” she said. “I consider you someone I can count on,” Then she added, “But that wouldn’t be easy for me to do.”
“Definitely,” she said.
--no judging
--no telling
And in that simple exchange, our confirmation and communication was sealed.
“We should try to see each other more often,” she said.
“Two times a year for sure,” I replied. “And three would be super.”
The next day I asked her, “Could I come for Thanksgiving dinner if I had no where else to go?”
“Of course,” she said.
Later, I cooked spaghetti and she had four helpings. I made note of that, because it reminded me there's an often unspoken third rule in friendship: notice the little things. That is something I don't want to forget.
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Seven Things
.
Share 7 facts about yourself - some random, some weird.
Tag 7 people at the end of your post by leaving their names as well as links to their blogs.
Let them know they have been tagged by leaving a comment on their blogs.
.
Seven things about me:
.
1. I can't keep my clothes neat and folded. I don't know why.
.
2. On a related note, I hate hangers. They attack me. Same with vacuum cleaners.
.
3. I welcome the chance to be kind.
.
4. But I strongly dislike being taken advantage of.
.
5. I lived in Germany for two years without heat or hot water. My then husband and I had a small stove in the living room and a water tank in the bathroom and we would have to build coal fires to get any warmth at all. I would lie in bed at night and look at my chattering breath in the darkness.
.
6. I was arrested at age 13 for breaking and entering. My father embarrassed me at the police station by asking if I could pick up leaves at City Hall for punishment.
.
7. I didn't have a date for my Senior Prom in high school and it just about killed me.
.
I'm not tagging anyone because this week I prefer voluntary participation. Volunteers: take your places please...
Saturday, November 15, 2008
Saturday Lite
The doctor arrived, examined the baby, checked his weight and found it somewhat below normal.
The doctor asked if the baby was breast fed or bottle fed.
"Breast fed," the woman replied.
"Well, strip down to your waist," the doctor asked. She did. He pressed, kneaded, rolled, cupped,
and pinched both breasts in a detailed, rigorously thorough examination.
Motioning for her to get dressed he said, "No wonder this baby is under weight! You don't have any milk."
"I know," she said, "I'm his grandmother, but I'm glad I came."
Friday, November 07, 2008
An (Amazing) Update on Publishing a Book
Wednesday, November 05, 2008
MANohMANohMAN!
Monday, November 03, 2008
Alphabet Soup
Can’t Do
Could you?
I’m at the beginning:
Accept, Accelerate, Acquiesce,
and sprinting to the L’s,
Long, Loosen, Lighten up,
Onto to the T’s:
Trust, Turn in, Truncate,
Then to the final stop:
Zero. Zilch. Zenith.
I am plucking words,
Seeking sounds,
And mixing colors
To explain why oh why
You are there
And I am here
And the in-between
Is alphabetically and phonetically speaking
All Wrong.
Saturday, November 01, 2008
Mr. Ryan Arrested
Friday, October 31, 2008
Thursday 13
3. You are looking at five heads of iceberg lettuce. Cut up, this became Chinese Chicken Salad which became lunch for the Art Fair.
.
4. The Story of Alex and Lily, officially titled The Light Stays On, is in its final preparations. The cover is being designed, the pages have been laid out, the introductions are completed, and somewhere around Thanksgiving the book will be published. I have taken on a much more formidable task than I anticipated: the marketing and distribution will be no small matter. But I'm going for it.
.
5. Where would you go for a few weeks if you could travel anywhere and do anything you wished in the wide world? I'd like suggestions.
6. Mr. Ryan's Mother broke her foot and cannot carry him. Not fair.
.