Old bones creaking today and
I was not quite up to participating in a vigorous day at the street fair of my
favorite organization, the San
Francisco Center
for the Book. I went back and looked at photos I had taken in previous years,
but then thought…did I document this calendar day on other years? What do I
remember…and were the photos worth it? The photos are within the 24 hours of September 29th each year since 2008. Really weird what I photograph! Only one is a verifiable event. Photo four is setting up for the street fair early in the morning of September 29, 2011.
Sunday, September 29, 2013
Sunday, September 22, 2013
before the sky filled
Autumn came in with a surprise rainstorm…very unusual for September here. I am always amazed that the ocean roils with a storm message before the sky is filled with clouds. Once, many observers knew what this portended, how to read it….now, at least for me, I go to the internet weather report.
Sunday, September 15, 2013
circular nature of nature
This morning I had several reminders of the
joy of the changing seasons.
A flutter outside my kitchen window focused my
sleepy eyes on a small flock of birds feasting on the seeds of a drying garden
a few properties to the north. Finally, able to identify them as juncos…all the
dates for arrival in my bird book have been in late October or November. Not
sure the significance of this….perhaps an early and harsh winter?
Later, puttering in my little garden area, I
saw a butterfly on a salvia…same type butterfly in the
Spring on a meadow sage. (I posted it here at the time...they look almost identical).
Just a gracious and happy reminder of the circular nature of nature.
Wednesday, September 4, 2013
the end of art
Seamus Heaney, RIP
“The end of art is peace…."
From
The Harvest Bow
“It strikes me that
the hermit and the poet probably have much in common: the need for solitude;
the deep-down awareness of things and the self-discipline to spend hours in
contemplation,”
Fr. Kevin Doran, homily at
funeral mass for Seamus Heaney
Sunday, September 1, 2013
and you get to smile
If everyone had the luxury to pursue a life of exactly what they love,
we would all be ranked as visionary and brilliant. … If you got to spend every
day of your life doing what you love, you can't help but be the best in the
world at that. And you get to smile every day for doing so.
Neil
deGrasse Tyson
I am not sure lolling about qualifies one for vision and brilliance, but it does look like something that would make me smile a lot. Not feeling particularly visionary, but the weather here is finally nice enough for pool time. (But, I don't have a pool).
Sunday, August 25, 2013
memory and time
I am fascinated by concepts
of how we perceive time and how memory seems so variable, often changing in
each recall. Of course, as a poet, both time and memory are central to my
writing. Maria Popova in a brilliant review of Claudia Hamilton’s Time Warped:Unlocking the Mysteries of Time
Perception used this quote connecting memory with how we perceive time:
It is memory that
creates the peculiar, elastic properties of time. It not only gives us the
ability to conjure up a past experience at will, but to reflect on those
thoughts through autonoetic consciousness — the sense that we have of ourselves
as existing across time — allowing us to re-experience a situation mentally and to step outside those memories to consider their
accuracy.
Maria Popova's superb blog is: http://www.brainpickings.org/
Maria Popova's superb blog is: http://www.brainpickings.org/
Sunday, August 18, 2013
barriers exist
Various barriers to free expression and privacy have been much in the news, but those barriers often do not apply to me in my every day world. However, barriers exist.
I am truly struggling in a new phase of my poetry to explore
some difficult times in my life. Those times are an essential, but mostly an unexpressed part of who I am today. It seems imperative to bring those times
openly into my creative process.
But, I have become so aware of my barriers to writing honestly,
and even to remembering. The barriers once seemed, or were, essential
for self protection in society, relationships, work and ultimately my own self
image. Because of change and aging, they are no longer relevant. The question today seems to be, can I remove these fences that block my reach?
Are they unmovable or a matter of changing perspective?
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