when clouds march…

byNeilWaldmanFromAboveInOil

by Neil Waldman “From Above” in oil

 

sometimes clouds are blue
and march: military might:
strut across the sky!

 

singing of The Battle Hymn of the Republic by the Army Marching Band:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jy6AOGRsR80

later day saints

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Diane and Tom Brown’s grandchildren

elders of the church

healthy, responsible men

strapping sinew’d souls!

every death is a birthday…

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John fathers Owen

 

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Owen fathers Oliver

 

The Writer’s Almanac for Sunday, December 1, 2019


December 1st 

by Billy Collins

 

Today is my mother’s birthday,


but she’s not here to celebrate


by opening a flowery card


or looking calmly out a window.

If my mother were alive,


she’d be 114 years old,


and I am guessing neither of us


would be enjoying her birthday very much.

Mother, I would love to see you again


to take you shopping or to sit

in your sunny apartment with a pot of tea,


but it wouldn’t be the same at 114.

And I’m no prize either,


almost 20 years older than the last time


you saw me sitting by your deathbed.


Some days, I look worse than yesterday’s oatmeal.

Happy Birthday, anyway. Happy Birthday to you.


Here I am in a wallpapered room


raising a glass of birthday whiskey


and picturing your face, the brooch on your collar.

It must have been frigid that morning


in the hour just before dawn


on your first December 1st


at the family farm a hundred miles north of Toronto.

I imagine they had you wrapped up tight,


and there was your tiny pink face


sticking out of the bunting,


and all those McIsaacs getting used to saying your name.
 
“December 1st” by Billy Collins from The Rain in Portugal. Random House, © 2016. Reprinted by permission of Chris Calhoun Agency.

Mark Twain…tongue in cheek…

MarkTwain

Mark Twain’s favorite quotes:

One of the most quotable of authors, Mark Twain said:
“It were not best that we should all think alike; it is difference of opinion that makes horse races.”

And “Truth is mighty and will prevail. There is nothing the matter with this, except that it ain’t so.”

And “Familiarity breeds contempt — and children.”

And “The secret source of humor itself is not joy but sorrow. There is no humor in heaven.”

 

at my neighbor’s house…

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Thanksgiving Day 2019

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Thanksgiving Day 2019

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Lynn and grandson (6 years old)

 

CS Lewis reminds me never to be ashamed of being  child-like. That is where imagination lives. Ask any pe·di·a·tri·cian.

CS Lewis
It’s the birthday of the writer who said: “When I was ten, I read fairy tales in secret and would have been ashamed if I had been found doing so. Now that I am fifty I read them openly. When I became a man I put away childish things, including the fear of childishness and the desire to be very grown up.” That’s C.S. Lewis, born in Belfast (1898), the author of the seven-volume children’s series The Chronicles of Narnia, which begins with The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (1950), the story of four children sent away from London because of wartime air raids. He also said, “Someday you will be old enough to start reading fairy tales again.”
Besides fairy tales and children’s classics, he wrote theological books, including The Screwtape Letters (1942), a novel in which a demon writes to his nephew; and The Great Divorce (1945), where residents of hell take a bus ride to heaven, and Mere Christianity (1952), based on talks he gave on the BBC during World War II.
C.S. Lewis said, “Miracles are a retelling in small letters of the very same story which is written across the whole world in letters too large for some of us to see.”

thanksgiving

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Thanksgiving
by Linda McCarriston
Every year we call it down upon ourselves,
the chaos of the day before the occasion,
the morning before the meal. Outdoors,
the men cut wood, fueling appetite
in the gray air, as Nana, Arlene, Mary,
Robin—whatever women we amount to—
turn loose from their wrappers the raw,
unmade ingredients. A flour sack leaks,
potatoes wobble down counter tops
tracking dirt like kids, blue hubbard erupts
into shards and sticky pulp when it’s whacked
with the big knife, cranberries leap away
rather than be halved. And the bird, poor
blue thing—only we see it in its dead skin—
gives up for good the long, obscene neck, the gizzard,
the liver quivering in my hand, the heart.
So what? What of it? Besides the laughter,
I mean, or the steam that shades the windows
so that the youngest sons must come inside
to see how the smells look. Besides
the piled wood closing over the porch windows,
the pipes the men fill, the beers
they crack, waiting in front of the game.
Any deliberate leap into chaos, small or large,
with an intent to make order, matters. That’s what.
A whole day has passed between the first apple
cored for pie, and the last glass polished
and set down. This is a feast we know how to make,
a Day of Feast, a day of thanksgiving
for all we have and all we are and whatever
we’ve learned to do with it: Dear God, we thank you
for your gifts in this kitchen, the fire,
the food, the wine. That we are together here.
Bless the world that swirls outside these windows—
a room full of gifts seeming raw and disordered,
a great room in which the stoves are cold,
the food scattered, the children locked forever
outside dark windows. Dear God, grant
to the makers and keepers power to save it all.
 
“Thanksgiving” by Linda McCarriston, from Talking Soft Dutch. Texas Tech Press © 1984.

when gentleness died…

Amazing Amazon by Katerina Babanovsky

illustrator: Katerina Babanofsky

 

The Year Gentleness Died 
by Michael Kiesow Moore

It was the year gentleness died.
Larry was first to go 
the sweet young man covered with purple lesions 
He was the sweetest. Men can be sweet, you know.
Then it was Keith’s turn. 
He was a rebel rouser, full of righteous anger.
 But at his core he was all gentleness.
 And it was a plague against the gentle.
And then Frederic went, 
dear lovely Frederic.
 His spirit was like a puppy’s
 bouncing and joyful, always joyful,
 and now gone. and if you never met Kerry—
I could do this all day, telling you 
all whom we lost the year gentleness died.
They went in the tens,  then the hundreds,
 we lost them by the thousands, 
then ten times that across all the lands. They kept falling, all the gentle ones.
 
“The Year Gentleness Died” by Michael Kiesow Moore from The Song Castle. Nodin Press © 2019.

Since I missed this workshop, …

I’m sharing the graphic jewels to advertise the event!!!!

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Fair2019

Barry

by Barry Morenz

we get older and

practice daily “art of strokes”:

older gets better!

 

turquoise and orange

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from the cliff

 

calls the eagle mom

thru the clouds, the wind,

the waves her feathers spread for babe

Definition #47 synchronicity

the ultimate balance

jeannepoland's avatarThe Vibrant Channeled Creator

coincidental? coincidental?

simultaneous

balance – related gesture:

distributed weight

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