Panorama

CherJiang01

CherJiang02

CherJiang03triptych by Cher Jiang

.

.

past to future

left to right

downside upside

profile quarter view

guileless coy

winged grounded

swivel views

Collaboration

Collaboration onHonorary ScrollStevens&O'Brien

Calligraphy by John Stevens and wood box by Martin O’Brien

Unravel the scroll:

grasp eloquent MAJUSCULES

minuscules unfurled!

Climate Change Hazards

PilarLama

we’ll be watching for

rising temperatures,

sea levels,

precipitation!

Third Eye

JeanneDot

Bengali moment

scribes wisdom’s strokes, magic folks

seeing eye from soul

Nana Camden

BethanyVere

illustration by Bethany Vere

luminescent dog

silver haired with wisdom’s age

sly silver slivers

Ordinary

IMG_6342

How Do I Love Thee?

26 May 2012

by jeanne poland

How Do I Love Thee?
Let Me Count the Ways:

I love thee to the heights of the ceiling fan and skylight
and newspapers on the roof;
And depths of the carpet under-padding that cushions our feet.

I love thee to the lights you maintain
and the filters you replace,

To the birds you feed
and the computers you reboot;

To the steps you climb
and the pocketbook you guard;

To the garbage you tote
and the containers you recycle;

To the scents you disperse
and the aromas you emit;

And should you disappear again
I would mourn and pant and search you out

To hold and claim: “my man”
eternally!

.

Frank Capra,
three time Academy Award Winner, said, “I wanted to glorify the average man, not the guy at the top, not the politician, not the banker, just the ordinary guy whose strength I admire, whose survivability I admire.”

Luminosity

oilPaintingbyJudyReynoldsWinterHarborField

Oil Painting by Judy Reynolds: Winter Harbor Field

There is a certain slant of light

On Winter Afternoons

That oppresses like the heft

of cathedral tunes

Emily Dickenson

.

The Skylight

by Seamus Heaney

You were the one for skylights. I opposed
Cutting into the seasoned tongue-and-groove
Of pitch pine. I liked it low and closed,
Its claustrophobic, nest-up-in-the-roof
Effect. I liked the snuff-dry feeling,
The perfect, trunk-lid fit of the old ceiling.
Under there, it was all hutch and hatch.
The blue slates kept the heat like midnight thatch.

But when the slates came off, extravagant
Sky entered and held surprise wide open.
For days I felt like an inhabitant
Of that house where the man sick of the palsy
Was lowered through the roof, had his sins forgiven,
Was healed, took up his bed and walked away.

Soothing

Yamamoto

design by Yamamoto

Perhaps as a child you had the chicken pox
and your mother, to soothe you in your fever
or to help you fall asleep, came into your room
and read to you from some favorite book,
Charlotte’s Web or Little House on the Prairie,
a long story that she quietly took you through
until your eyes became magnets for your shuttering
lids and she saw your breathing go slow. And then
she read on, this time silently and to herself,
not because she didn’t know the story,
it seemed to her that there had never been a time
when she didn’t know this story—the young girl
and her benevolence, the young girl in her sod house—
but because she did not yet want to leave your side
though she knew there was nothing more
she could do for you. And you, not asleep but simply weak,
listened to her turn the pages, still feeling
the lamp warm against one cheek, knowing the shape
of the rocking chair’s shadow as it slid across
your chest. So that now, these many years later,
when you are clenched in the damp fist of a hospital bed,
or signing the papers that say you won’t love him anymore,
when you are bent at your son’s gravesite or haunted
by a war that makes you wake with the gun
cocked in your hand, you would like to believe
that such generosity comes from God, too,
who now, when you have the strength to ask, might begin
the story again, just as your mother would,
from the place where you have both left off.

“Prayer” by Keetje Kuipers from Beautiful in the Mouth. © BOA Editions, 2010. Reprinted with permission.

Exploring Dementia

the written wordnotdead

“The written word is not dead!”

Feeling lost? Blank mind?

words, direction vaporized?

explore like a child!

Who is Mark Zukerberg?

IMG_6343

It’s the birthday of the man who said, “Move fast and break things. Unless you are breaking stuff, you are not moving fast enough.”

 That’s Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg.

A precocious student, Zuckerberg began writing software in middle school after his father taught him BASIC programming. He wrote dozens of programs in high school including Synapse, a music player that got the attention of AOL and Microsoft, both of whom tried to recruit him.

Instead he enrolled in Harvard in 2002 where he founded Facebook when he was 19 years old.

He has pledged to leave 99 percent of his Facebook shares to charity.

He said: “Facebook was not originally created to be a company. It was built to accomplish a social mission — to make the world more open and connected.”

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